FAMILY PAKVOBACTERIACEAE 



589 



septicemic disease, accompanied by ar- 

 thritis, erythema and angina. 



Habitat : The cause of an acute febrile 

 disease sometimes called erythema mul- 

 tiforme. 



Appendix II: The following species 

 may be identical with some of those 

 listed above or related to them : 



Bacillus marianensis Leber and Pro- 

 wazek. (Berlin, klin. Wochnschr., 1, 

 1911, 27.) Allied to the Koch-Weeks 

 Bacillus. Associated with cases of pink 

 eye. 



Bacillus weeksi Xeveu-Lemaire. 

 (Precis Parasitol. Hum., 5th ed., 1921, 

 24.) Described bj' Weeks. The cause 

 of trachoma or granular conjunctivitis in 

 tropical countries. Transmitted by the 

 domestic fly. Probably intended, for the 

 Week's bacillus (Weeks, New York Med. 

 Record, 31, 1887, 571). 



Bacterium tiissis convulsivae Lehmann 

 and Neumann. (Bacterium, Czaplewski 

 and Hensel, Deut. med. Wochnschr., 

 23, 1897, 587; Lehmann and Neumann, 

 Bakt. Diag., 2 Aufl., 2, 1899, 192; not 

 Bacterium tussis convulsivae Lehmann 

 and Neumann, ibid., 7 Aufl., 2, 1927, 

 317; Bacillus tussis convulsivae Leh- 

 mann and Neumann, ibid., 4 Aufl., 2, 

 1907, 269.) Considered the cause of 

 whooping cough by the original isolators. 



Hemophilus aphrophilus Khairat. 

 (Jour. Path, and Bact., 50, 1940, 497.) 

 From blood and from heart valve of a case 

 of endocarditis. 



Hemophilus cuniculi Hauduroy et al. 

 {Hemophilus sp. Gibbons, Jour. Inf. Dis., 

 45, 1929, 288; Hauduroy et al.. Diet. d. 

 Bact. Path., 1937, 249.) From skin 

 abscesses of rabbits. 



Hemophilus gallinarum Delaplane, Er- 

 win and Stuart and Hemophilus galli- 

 narum Eliot and Lewis. (Bacillus hemo- 

 globinophilus coryzae gallinarum De 

 Blieck, Tijdsch. v. Diergeneensk., 58, 

 1931, 310; also see Vet. Jour., 88, 1932, 9; 



Delaplane, Erwin and Stuart, R. I. 

 State Coll. Sta. Bull. 244, May, 1934; 

 Eliot and Lewis, Jour. Amer. Vet. Med. 

 Assoc, 84, 1934, 878.) From edematous 

 fluid from the head of a chicken. The 

 cause of an infectious rhinitis in chickens. 



Hemophilus influenzae murium 

 (Ivairies and Schwartzer) LwofT. {Bac- 

 terium influenzae murium Kairies and 

 Schwartzer, Cent. f. Bakt., I Abt., Orig., 

 137, 1936, 351; Lwoff, Ann. Inst. Past., 

 62, 1939, 168.) From the lungof a mouse. 



Hemophilus meningitidis (Martins) 

 Hauduroy et al. {Coccobacillus menin- 

 gitidis Martins, Compt. rend. Soc. Biol., 

 Paris, 99, 1928, 955; Hauduroy et al., 

 Diet. d. Bact. Path., 1937, 254.) Re- 

 sembles Hemophilus influenzae except 

 that it shows sluggish motility. From 

 ce re bro -spinal fluid. 



Hemophilus muris Hauduroy et al. 

 (Bacillus of an epizootic of stock mice, 

 Mackie, Van Rooyne and Gilroy, Brit. 

 Jour. E.xp. Path., I4, 1933, 132; Haudu- 

 roy et al., Diet. d. Bact. Path., 1937, 

 255. ) From heart blood, spleenand other 

 organs of mice dying from an epizootic 

 disease . 



Hemophilus ovis Mitchell. (Jour. 

 Amer. Vet. Assoc, 68, 1925, 8.) From 

 bronchi of sheep. 



Hcjnophilus pertussis Ford. {Bacillus 

 pertussis eppendorf Jochmann and 

 Krause, Ztschr. f. Hyg., 36, 1901, 193; 

 Ford, Textb. of Bact., 1927, 615; not 

 necessarily identical with Bordet and 

 Gengou's organism, Hemophilus pertussis 

 Holland, Jour. Bact., 5, 1920, 215.) From 

 the respiratory tract and lungs in per- 

 tussis. 



Hemophilus putoriorum Hauduroy et 

 al. {Bacterium influenzae putoriorum 

 multiforme Kairies, Ztschr. f. Hyg., 117, 

 1935, 12; Hauduroy et al., Diet. d. Bact. 

 Path., 1937, 258.) From the respiratory 

 tract of ferrets. 



Lehmann and Neumann (Bakt. Diag., 

 6 Aufl., 2, 1920, and 7 Aufl., 2, 1927) list 



