FAMILY BACTERIACEAE 



679 



wirtsch. Jahrb., 23, 1894, 657; Aligula, 

 Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 418.) From root 

 ncdules of lupine. 



Bacterium gracilescens Weiss. (Arb. 

 bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 2, Heft 3, 1902, 

 259.) From fermenting asparagus and 

 malt . 



Bacterium gracillimum Weiss. (Arb. 

 bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 2, Heft 3, 1902, 

 235.) From bean and asparagus in- 

 fusions. 



Bacterium granulatum Henrici. (Hen- 

 rici, Arb. bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 1, Heft 

 1, 1894, 33; not Bacterium granulatum 

 Chester, Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 189.) 

 From cheese. 



Bacterium granulosum Weiss. (Weiss, 

 Arb. bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 5, Heft 3, 1902, 

 212; not Bacterium granulosum Lehmann 

 and Neumann, Bakt. Diag., 5 Aufl., 2, 

 1912, 306.) From vegetable infusions. 



Bacterium gryllotalpae ^letalnikov and 

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

 201, 1935, 367.) From diseased larvae 

 of the cricket (Gryllotalpa gryllotalpa) . 



Bacterium gummosum Ritsert. (Rit- 

 sert, Ber. d. pharmaz. Gesell., /, 1891, 

 389; abst. in Cent. f. Bakt., 11, 1892, 

 730; Bacillus gumynosus IMigula, Sj'st. 

 d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 873.) A mi.xture of a 

 spore-forming rod and a streptococcus. 

 See Bacillus gummosus Happ and Micro- 

 coccus gu77i7nosus Happ. 



Bacterium halans (Zimmermann) ^li- 

 gula. (Bacillus halans Zimmermann, 

 Die Bakterien unserer Trink- u. A'utz- 

 wasser, Chemnitz, 2, 1894, 54; Migula, 

 Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 429.) From 

 water. 



Bacterium hehetisiccus Steinhaus. 

 (Jour. Bact., ^2, 1941, 762 and 773.) 

 From the walking stick {Diapheromera 

 femorata) . 



Bacterium herbicola a aureum Gei- 

 lingcr. (Mitteil. a. d. Gebiete d. 

 Lebensmitteluntersuchungen u. Hyg., 

 12, 1921, 262.) From corn meal. This 

 is a variety of Bacillus herbicola Burri 

 and Diiggeli. 



Bacterium herbicola rubrum Diiggeli. 

 (Duggeli, Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 12, 



1904, 605; Bacterium herbicola /3 rubrum, 

 Lehmann and Neumann, Bakt. Diag., 4 

 -\ufl., 2, 1907, 356.) From germinating 

 plants, roots and barley seeds. 



Bacterium hexacarbovorum Stormer. 

 (Jahresber. d. Vereinigg. f. angew. 

 Botanik, 5, 1907, 116.) From soil. 

 Utilizes benzene and certain benzene 

 derivatives. 



Bacterium hidium Goobin. (Russian 

 Health Resort Service, 5, 1923, 3.) At- 

 tacks ethane and other hydrocarbons. 



Bacterium hirudinicolicum Lehmen- 

 sick. (Cent. f. Bakt., I Abt., Orig., 1^7, 

 1941, 317; see Biol. Abst., 18, 1944, No. 

 6761.) Symbiotic in the intestines of 

 Hirudo officinalis and H. medicinalis. 



Bacterium hoshigaki var. glucuronicum 

 II and III Takahashi and Asai. (Cent, 

 f. Bakt., II Abt., S7, 1933, 395 and 405.) 

 From dried persimmons (hoshigaki). 



Bacterium infecundum Chester. (Ba- 

 cillus filiformis havaniensis Sternberg, 

 Man. of Bact., 1893, 650; Bacterium fili- 

 formis havaniensis Chester, Ann. Rept. 

 Del. Col. Agr. Exp. Sta., 9, 1897, 126; 

 Chester, Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 184.) 

 From the liver of a yellow fever cadaver. 

 Anaerobic. 



Bacterium inocuum Chester. (Wilde, 

 Wien. klin. Wochnschr., 1892, No. 1-2; 

 Bacillus lactis inocuus Kruse, in Fliigge, 

 Die Mikroorganismen, 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 

 352; Bacterium lactis inocuus Chester, 

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

 1897, 82; Chester, Man. Determ. Bact., 

 1901, 138.) From milk. 



Bacterium intrinsectum Steinhaus. 

 (Jour. Bact., ^2, 1941, 764 and 774.) 

 From an unidentified leaf beetle. 



Bacterium iogenum Baumgartner. 

 (Deutsche Monatschr. f. Zahnheilk., 27 , 

 764; Bacterium jogenum Baumgartner, 

 Ergeb. d. gesam. Zahnheilk., 1, 1911, 752 

 and 779; B. iogenum Kligler, Jour. Allied 

 Dent. Soc, 10, 1915, 152.) From the 

 mouth. Regarded as identical with 

 Jodococcus vaginatus Miller by Kligler 

 (loc. cit.). 



Bacterium keratomalaciae Migula. 

 (Bacillus septicus keratomalaciae Babes, 



