530 



MANUAL OF DKTERMIXATIVE BACTERIOLOGY 



Antigenic structuro: XXIX, [Vi]*: 

 2,30, [zsi]: — . 



Source : From the ovary of a hen whose 

 blood gave a positive reaction with the 

 »S'. pallor um antigen. Found in Buenos 

 Aires by Dr. Monteverde. 



Habitat: Also reported from hogs and 

 man (Edwards). 



♦Reported by Dr. P. R. Edwards 

 (personal communication). 



148. Sahnonella sp. (Tj'pe Urbana). 

 (SabnoticUa urbana Fldwardsand Bruner, 

 Jour. Inf. Dis., 69, 1941, 223.) 



Antigenic structure: XXX: b: e, n, 



Source: One culture was received from 

 Dr. Robert Graham, Urbana, Illinois 

 and was isolated from the contents of the 

 colon of a hog aft'ected with hemorrhagic 

 enteritis. The second culture was iso- 

 lated from the intestinal tract of a 

 chicken by Dr. W. L. Mallmann, East 

 Lansing, Michigan. 



Habitat: Also reported from man 

 (Edwards) . 



149. Salmonella sp. (Type Adelaide). 

 {Salmonella adelaide Cleland. Med. Jour. 

 Australia, 31, 1944, 59.) 



Antigenic structure: XXXV: f, g: — . 



Source : Isolated in Adelaide, Australia 

 by Miss Nancy Atkinson from two fatal 

 cases resembling typhoid fever. 



Habitat: Not reported from other 

 sources as yet. 



150. Salmonella sp. (Type Inverness). 

 (Salmonella Inverness Edwards and 

 Hughes, Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol, and Med., 

 56, 1944, 33.) 



Antigenic structure: XXXVIII: k: 

 1, 6 



Source: Isolated by Mrs. Mildred Gal- 

 ton and Mr. M. S. Quan of the Florida 

 State Department of H*ealth, from the 

 stool of a normal food handler, Inver- 

 ness, Florida. 



Habitat: Not reported from other 

 sources as yet. 



151. Salmonella sp. (Type Cham- 

 paign). (Salmonella champaign Ed- 



wards, Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol, and Med., 

 58, 1945, 291.) 



Antigenic structure: XXXIX: k: 

 1,5. .. . 



Source: Single culture isolated from 

 the liver of an adult hen by Dr. Robert 

 Graham, Champaign, Illinois. 



Habitat: Not reported from other 

 sources as yet. 



Appendix I: The following species and 

 varieties are largely taken from Haudu- 

 roy, Ehringer, Urbain, Guillot and 

 Magrou, Dictionnaire des Bact^ries 

 Pathogenes, Paris, 1937, 446-472. The 

 relationships of many of these are not 

 clear. 



Bacillus canariensis Migula. (Ba- 

 cillus der Kanarienvogelseptikamie, 

 Rieck, Deutsche Ztschr. f. Thiermed., 

 15, 1889, 69; Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., S, 

 1900, 770; Bacillus avisepticus Chester, 

 Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 220; not Ba- 

 cillus avisepticus Kitt, in Ivolle and 

 Wassermann,Handb. d. path.Mikroorg., 

 1 Aufl., 2, 1903, 544.) Associated with 

 intestinal catarrh and liver changes in 

 canaries. Hadley, Elkins and Caldwell 

 (Rhode Island Agr. Exp. Sta., Bull. 174, 

 1918, 178) regard this as probably Ba- 

 cillus gallinarum Klein. 



Bacillus friedehergensis Kruse. (Ba- 

 cillus der Friedeberger Fleischvergif- 

 tung, Gaffky and Paak, Mitt. a. d. 

 kaiserl. Gesundheitsamte, 6, 1890, 159; 

 Kruse, in Fliigge, Die Mikroorganismen, 

 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 378; Bacterium friede- 

 hergensis Chester, Ann. Rept. Del. Col. 

 Agr. Exp. Sta., 9, 1897, 73.) From 

 sausage in meat poisoning. 



Salmonella abortus canis Gard. (Ztschr. 

 f. Hyg., 121, 1938, 139.) From the feces 

 of four persons with paratyphoid appar- 

 ently spread from an infected dog. 

 Kauffmann regards this as identical 

 with Salmonella schottmuelleri. 

 . Salmonella annamensis Hauduroy et al. 

 (Un bacille du groupe des Salmonella, 

 Normet, Urbain and Chaillot, Compt. 

 rend. Soc. Biol., Paris, 101, 1929, 752; 

 Hauduroy et al., Diet. d. Bact. Path., 



