APPENDIX TO SUBORDER EUBACTERIINEAE 



703 



Vibrio frequens Humm {loc. cit., 56). 

 From marine algae {Cladophoropsis, 

 Laurencia poitei, etc.) Digests agar. 



Vibrio halonitrificans Smith. (Ro}^ 

 Soc. Queensland, Proc. for 1937, 49, 1938, 

 29.) From tank brines in bacon fac- 

 tories. Active growth in 4 to 10 per 

 cent brines. 



Vibrio haloplanktis ZoBell and Upham. 

 (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Oceanography, 

 Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 261.) Sessile form 

 found associated with marine phyto- 

 plankton. 



Vibrio hyphalus ZoBell and Upham. 

 (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Oceanography^ 

 Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 277.) From marine 

 bottom deposits. 



Vibrio marinagilis ZoBell and Upham. 

 (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Oceanography, 

 Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 264.) From sea 

 water and marine mud. 



Vibrio marinoflavus ZoBell and Up- 

 ham. (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Ocean- 

 ography, Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 258.) 

 From sea water. 



Vibrio marinofulvus ZoBell and Up- 

 ham. (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Ocean- 

 ography, Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 262.) 

 From sea water. 



Vibrio marinopraesens ZoBell and Up- 

 ham. (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Ocean- 

 ography, Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 256.) 

 From sea water. 



Vibrio marinovulgaris ZoBell and Up- 

 ham. (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Ocean- 

 ography, Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 261.) 

 From sea water. 



Vibrio notus Humm {loc. cit., 56). 

 From intertidal sand, Atlantic Beach, 

 North Carolina. Digests agar. 



Vibrio perimastrix Alarie. (Alarie, 

 Thesis, MacDonald Coll. McGill Univ., 

 1945; see Perlin and Michaelis, Sci., 103, 

 1946, 673.) Will decompose cellulose 

 only in presence of CO2. 



Vibrio phytoplanktis ZoBell and Up- 

 ham. (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Ocean- 

 ography, Univ. Calif., 6, 1944, 261.) 



From sea water and marine phyto- 

 plankton. 



Vibrio pieris Paillot. (Compt. rend. 

 Soc. Biol., Paris, 94, 1926, 68.) From 

 caterpillars of the cabbage butterfly 

 {Pieris brassicae) which had been para- 

 sitized by larvae of Apanieles glomeratus. 



Vibrio ponticus ZoBell and Upham. 

 (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Oceanography, 

 Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 259.) From sea 

 water. 



Vibrio rinnpel Lode. (Cent. f. Bakt., 

 I Abt., Orig., 35, 1903, 526; see Ballner, 

 Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 19, 1907, 572.) 

 From water. Phosphorescent. 



Vibrio stanieri Humm {loc. cit., 57). 

 From seaweed {Acanthophora spicifera), 

 Miami, Fla. Digests agar. 



Vibrio turbidus Humm {loc. cit., 57). 

 From seaweed {Gracilaria confervoides) . 

 Digests agar. 



Vibrio viridans Miller. (Quoted from 

 Miller, Microorganisms of Human 

 Mouth, Phila., 1890, 85; see Miller, Die 

 Mikroorganismen der Mundhohle, Leip- 

 zig, 1889.) From the mouth. 



Xanthomonas translucens var. phlei- 

 pratensis Wallin and Reddy. (Phyto- 

 pathology, 35, 1945, 939.) The cause of 

 a bacterial streak disease on timothy 

 grass {Phleum pratense). 



Xanthomonas vignicola Burkholder. 

 (Phytopath., 34, 1944, 431.) From cow- 

 pea, Vigna sinensis. 



Yersinia van Loghem (Ann. Past. 

 Inst., 72, 1946, 975), a genus proposed to 

 include Pasteurella pestis and P. pseudo- 

 tuberculosis. 



Ein neuer fiir Thiere path. Mikroorg. 

 aus dem Sputum eines Pneumoniekran- 

 ken, Bunzel and Federn, Arch. f. Hyg., 

 19, 1893; 326; Bacillus dubius pneumoniae 

 Kruse, in Fliigge, Die Mikroorganismen, 

 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 419; Bacterium sub- 

 pneumonicwin Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 

 1900, 376; Bacterium dubium Chester, 

 Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 142. From 

 the sputum of a pneumonia patient. 



