FAMILY EN'TEROBACTERIACEAE 



531 



1937, 450.) Isolated during an epidemic 

 of dysentery at Hue (Annam) in 1925. 



Salmonella archibaldii Castellani and 

 Chalmers. (Man. Trop. INIed., 3rd ed., 

 1919, 940.) 



Salmonella Carolina (Castellani) Cas- 

 tellani and Chalmers. {Bacillus caro- 

 li?ius Castellani, Ann. di Med. Xav. e 

 Colon., 1, 1918; Castellani and Chalmers, 

 Man. Trop. Med., 3rd ed., 1919, 940.) 



Salmonella coagulans (Castellani) Hau- 

 duroy et al. {Bacillus coagulans Cas- 

 tellani, 1916; Balkanella coagulans Cas- 

 tellani, 1916; see Castellani and Chal- 

 mers, Man. Trop. Med., 3rd ed., 1919, 

 935; Hauduroy et al., Diet. d. Bact. 

 Path., 1937, 453.) 



Salmonella columhensis (Castellani) 

 Castellani and Chalmers. {Bacterium 

 columbense Castellani, Proc. Meeting 

 Ceylon Branch British Assoc, 1905, 

 quoted from Castellani, Cent. f. Bakt., 

 I Abt., Orig., 74, 1914, 197; Bacillus 

 columhensis Castellani, Jour. Trop. Med. 

 and Hyg., 20, 1917, 181; Castellani and 

 Chalmers, Ann. Inst. Past., 34, 1920, 609; 

 Morganclla columhensis Fulton, Jour. 

 Bact., 46, 1943,81.) The cause of colum- 

 hensis fever. Isolated from feces, urine 

 and blood. 



Salmonella enteritidis var. v, Haudu- 

 roy et al. (Bacille para-Gartner V, 

 Rochaix and Couture, Revue de Micro- 

 biologie appliquee, 2, 1936; Hauduroj' 

 et al.. Diet. d. Bact. Path., 1937, 454.) 

 Found associated with Salmonella en- 

 teritidis in meat pies and in the feces of 

 individuals with food poisoning. 



Salmonella enteritidis -yellow , a variety 

 of Salmonella enteritidis Deskowitz and 

 Buchbinder (Jour. Bact., 29, 1935, 293). 

 Cultures differ from typical Salmonella 

 enteritidis in producing a yellow, water- 

 soluble pigment. From the feces of a 

 rat with enteric infection. 



Salmonella foetida Bergey et al. {Coc- 

 cohacillis foetidus ozenae Perez, Ann. 

 Inst. Past., 13, 1899, 937; Coccobacillus 

 {foetidus) ozaenae Ward, Jour. Bact., 2, 

 1917, 619; Bergey et al.. Manual, 1st ed., 

 1923, 220; Bacterium foetida Weldin and 



Levine, Abst. Bact., 7, 1923, 13; Es- 

 cherichia foetida Bergey et al.. Manual, 

 2nd ed., 1925, 222.) From chronic rhi- 

 nitis, ozena. See INIanual, 4th ed., 1934, 

 380 for a description of this species. 



Salmonella holsatiensis Roelcke. 

 (Also Salmonella Typ Holstein, Roelcke, 

 Cent. f. Bakt., I Abt., Orig., 137, 1936, 

 464.) According to Kauffmann (Ztschr. 

 f. Hyg., 119, 1937, 352) the 0-antigens of 

 this rapid fermenter of salicin and weak 

 indole-former are identical with those of 

 Salmonella poona. The H-antigens have 

 not been compared as yet. 



Salmonella icteroides (Sanarelli) Ber- 

 gey et al. (Bacillo icteroide, Sanarelli, 

 II Policlinico, 4, 1897, 412; Bacillus 

 icteroides Sanarelli, British Med. Jour., 

 July 3, 1897, 7; Bacterium icteroides 

 Lehmann and Neumann, Bakt. Diag., 

 2 Aufl., 2, 1899, 241; Bergey et al., 

 Manual, 1st ed., 1923, 218.) From yel- 

 low fever cadavers. See Manual, 5th 

 ed., 1939, 604 for a description of this 

 species. 



Salmonella iwo-jima Lindberg and 

 Bayliss. (Jour. Inf. Dis., 79, 1946, 

 92.) Isolated from a soldier on Iwo- 

 Jima during a routine examination of 

 food handlers. Belongs to Group C. 

 Antigenic structure: VI, VIII: i: 1, 5 . . . 

 Described too recently to be included 

 in the main bodj' of the text. 



Salmonella liceagi Leon. (Rev. Inst. 

 Salubridad y Enferm. Trop., 3, 1942, 

 273.) From feces. This probably be- 

 longs in the coliform group. 



Salmonella macfadyeanii (Weldin and 

 Levine) Weldin. {Bacterium macfad- 

 yeanii Weldin and Levine, Abst. Bact., 

 7, 1923, 13; Weldin, Iowa State Jour. Sci., 

 1, 1927, 168.) Associated with hog 

 cholera. 



Salmonella -mexicana ^'arela and 

 Olarte. (Rev. Inst. Salubridad y En- 

 ferm. Trop., 4, 1943, 313.) From feces. 



Salmonella monshaui Carlquist and 

 Coates. (Jour. Bact., 53, 1947, 249.) 

 Isolated from stump of a soldier who 

 suffered traumatic amputation of a leg 

 in the fighting around Monshau, Ger- 



