666 



MANUAL OF DETERMINATIVE BACTERIOLOGY 



1899, 507.) From sweat of a cholera 

 patient. 



Bacillus primus fullesi Dyar. (Ann. 

 N. Y. Acad. Sci., 8, 1895, 360; Bacterium 

 primus fullesi Chester, Ann. Rept. Del. 

 Col. Agr. Exp. Sta., 9, 1897, 72.) From 

 a leaf of the pitcher plant (Sarracenia 

 purpurea) . Regarded by D3'ar as identi- 

 cal with Bacillus No. 1, isolated by 

 Fulles (Ztschr. f. Hyg., 10, 1891, 250) 

 from forest soil. 



Bacillus promissus Kern. (Arb. bakt. 

 Inst. Karlsruhe, 1, Heft 4, 1896, 420.) 

 From the intestines of a dove. 



Bacillus proteidis Paillot. (Annales 

 des Epiphyties, 8, 1922, 130.) From dis- 

 eased larvae of the cabbage butterfly 

 {Pier is brassicae) . 



Bacillus protervus Trevisan. (Bacil- 

 lus der Conjunctivalsack d, Fick, Micro- 

 organ, in Conjunctivalsack, Wiesbaden, 

 1887; Trevisan, I generi e le specie delle 

 Batteriacee, 1889, 17.) From the con- 

 junctiva. 



Bacillus pruddeni Dyar. (Ann. N. Y. 

 Acad. Sci., 8, 1895, 378.) Found by 

 Dr. Prudden in a case of cj^stitis. • 



Bacillus pseudomirabilis Migula. 

 (Bacillus mirabilis Tataroff, Jnaug. 

 Diss., Dorpat, 1891, IS; Migula, Syst. d. 

 Bakt., 2, 1900, 818.) From water. Ac- 

 cording to Migula, Tataroff mistakenly 

 believed that he had Zimmermann's 

 Bacillus mirabilis. 



Bacillus pseudotuberculosis Migula. 

 (Du Cazal and Vaillard, Ann. Inst. 

 Past., 5, 1891, 353; Bacillus pseudotuber- 

 culosis liquefaciens Kruse, in Fliigge, 

 Die Mikroorganismen. 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 

 455; Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 644.) 

 From nodules in the peritoneum. 



Bacillus pseudotyphosus Kruse. (Lo- 

 sener, Arb. a. d. kaiserl. Gesundheit- 

 samte, 11, 1895, 2; Kruse, in Flugge, Die 

 Mikroorganismen, 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 383; 

 Bacterium pseudotyphosus Chester, Ann. 

 Rept. Del. Col. Agr. Exp. Sta., 9, 1897, 

 73; not Bacteriuvi pseudotyhposmu Mi- 

 gula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 190(), 428.) Iso- 

 lated by Losener from peritoneal fluid of 

 a hog, from water, etc.; by Pansini from 



a liver abscess; by Babes from a variety 

 of sources. Kruse used this as a general 

 name for any typhoid-like organism. 



Bacillus pulpae pyogenes Miller. (Mil- 

 ler, Die Mikroorganismen der Mund- 

 hohle, Leipzig, 1889, 219.) From gangre- 

 nous pulp of a tooth. 



Bacillus punctatus Shul'gina and Kali- 

 nicker. (Rep. Bur. Appl. Ent., Lenin- 

 grad, 3, No. 1, 1927, 99-104, quoted from 

 Steinhaus, Bact. Assoc. Extracell. with 

 Insects and Ticks, Minneapolis, 1942, 

 79; not Bacillus pmictatus Zimmermann, 

 Bakt. unserer Trink- u. Nutzwasser, 

 Chemnitz, I Reihe, 1890, 38.) From the 

 locust (Locusta miqratoria) . 



Bacillus puncticulatus Migula. (No. 

 16, Lembke, Arch. f. Hyg., 29, 1897, 322; 

 Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 678.) 

 From feces. 



Bacillus putidus Kern. (Kern, Arb. 

 bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 1, Heft 4, 1896, 

 400; not Bacillus putidus Chester, Man. 

 Determ. Bact., 1901, 237; not Bacillus 

 putidus Weinberg et al., Les Microbes 

 Anaerobies, 1937, 790.) From the stom- 

 ach and intestines of birds. 



Bacillus pylori Ford. (Studies from 

 the Royal Victoria Hosp., Montreal, 1 

 (5), 1903, 44; also see Jour. Med. Res., /, 

 1901, 217.) From the stomach. 



Bacillus pyogenes Lucet. (Bacillus 

 pyogenes bovis Lucet, Ann. Inst. Past., 

 ?■, 1893, 372; Lucet, ibid., 328; not Bacil- 

 lus pyogenes Glage, Ztschr. f. Fleish. u. 

 Milchhyg., 13, 1903, 166.) From bovine 

 abscesses. 



Bacillus pyogenes \ar. liquefaciens 

 Chester. (Bacillus pyogenes foetidus 

 liquefaciens Lanz, Cent. f. Bakt., 14, 

 1893, 277; Bacterium pyogenes foetidus 

 liquefaciens Chester, Ann. Rept. Del. 

 Col. Agr. Exp. Sta., 9, 1897, 92; Chester, 

 Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 235.) From 

 a brain abscess after otitis media. 



Bacillus pyogenes soli Bolton. (Ann. 

 Jour. Med. Sci., June, 1892; quoted from 

 Sternberg, Man. of Bact., 1893, 728.) 

 From garden earth. 



Bacillus pyraineis I and //, Paillot. 

 (Compt. rend. Acad. Sci., Paris, 157, 



