14 GENERAL MORPHOLOGY AND BIOLOGY. 



the former number being the more frequent. To all these forms 

 the word micrococcus is often generally applied. The individuals 

 in a growth of micrococci often show a tendency to remain 

 united in twos. These are spoken of as diplococci, but this is 

 not a distinctive character, since every coccus as a result of 

 division becomes a diplococcus, though in some species the 

 tendency to remain in pairs is well marked. The adhesion of 

 cocci to oiie another depends on the character of the capsule. 

 Often this has a well-marked outer limit (micrococcus tetragenus), 

 sometimes it is of great extent, its diameter being many times 

 that of the coccus {streptococcus mesenterioides). It is especially 

 among the streptococci and staphylococci that the phenomenon 

 of the formation of arthrospores is said to occur. In none of 

 the cocci have endogenous spores been certainly observed. The 

 number of species of the streptococci and staphylococci probably 

 exceeds 150. Usually included in this group are coccus-like 

 organisms which divide in three axes at right angles to one 

 another. These are usually referred to as sarcince. If the cells 

 are lying single they are round, but usually they are seen in 

 cubes of eight, with the sides which are in contact slightly 

 flattened. Large numbers of such cubes may be lying together. 

 The sarcinae are, as a rule, rather larger than the other members 

 of the group. Most of the cocci are non-motile, but a few motile 

 species possessing flagella have been described. 



2. Bacilli. — These consist of long or short cylindrical cells, 

 with rounded or sharply rectangular ends, usually not more^an 

 I /i broad, but varying very greatly in length. They may^te 

 motile or non-motile. Where flagella occur, these may be di^ 

 tributed all round the organism, or only at one or both of the 

 poles {pseudomonas). Several species are provided with sharply 

 marked capsules (B. pneumonice). In many species endogenous 

 sporulation occurs. The spores may be central or terminal, 

 round, oval, or spindle-shaped. 



Great confusion in nomenclature has arisen in this group in consequence 

 of the different artificial meanings assigned to the essentially synonymous 

 terms bacterium and bacillus. Migula, for instance, applies the former term 

 to non-motile species, the latter to the motile. Hueppe, on the other hand, 

 calls those in which endogenous sporulation does not occur, bacteria, and 

 those where it does, bacilli. In the ordinary terminology of systematic bac- 

 teriology the word bacterium has been almost dropped, and is reserved, as we 



