FAMILY BACILLACEAE 



737 



Gorini. (Rend. R. Accad. dei Lincei, 

 8, 1928, 598.) From manure, fodder and 

 milk. Regarded by Gorini (personal 

 communication, 1925) as identical with 

 Bacillus circulans Jordan. 



Bacillus acido-proteolyticus casei 

 Gorini. (Le Lait, 9, 1912, 98.) From 

 Parmesan and Emmenthal cheese. Re- 

 garded by Gorini (personal communica- 

 tion, 1925) as equivalent to one of the 

 species of Tyrothrix of Duclaux. 



Bacillus adametzi Trevisan. (Brauner 

 Wasserbacillus, Adametz and Wichmann, 

 Mittheil. d. oesterr. Versuchsstat. f. 

 Brauerei u. Malzerei, Wien, Heft 1, 1888, 

 51 ; Trevisan, I generi e le specie delle 

 Batteriacee, 1889, 19; not Bacillus 

 adametzii Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 

 686; Bacillus brunneus Eisenberg, Bakt. 

 Diag., 3 Aufl., 1891, 142; Bacterium bruii- 

 ueurn JMigula, ibid., .331; not Bacterium 

 brunneneum Schroeter, in Cohn, Beitr. 

 z. Biol. d. Pflanz., ;, Heft 2, 1882, 125.) 

 From water. 



Bacillus adhaerens Laubach. (Jour. 

 Bact., 1, 1916, 503.) One culture iso- 

 lated from dust. 



Bacillus aegypiiacusWerner . (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 87, 1933, 459.) Good 

 growth on Ca n-butyrate agar. One 

 culture isolated from Egyptian soil. 



Bacillus aerifaciens Steinhaus. (Jour. 

 Bact., 42, 1941, 782.) Author states that 

 it probably belongs to the Aerobacillus 

 group. From triturated specimens of the 

 white cabbage butterfly (Pieris rapae). 



Bacillus aerobius von Wahl. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt . , II Abt .,16, 1906, 496. ) Reported 

 to resemble Bacillus mesentericus fuscus . 

 From canned peas. 



Bacillus aerophilus Fliigge. (Fliigge, 

 Die Mikroorganismen,2 Aufl., 1886, 321; 

 Bacterium aerophilum Chester, Man. De- 

 term. Bact., 1901, 191.) From dust. 



Bacillus afanassieffi Trevisan. {Ba- 

 cillus tussis convtdsivae Afanassief, St. 

 Petersburg, med. Wochnschr., 1887, No. 

 38-42; not Bacillus tussis convulsivae 

 Lehmann and Neumann, Bakt. Diag., 4 

 Aufl., 2, 1907, 269; Trevisan, I generi e le 

 specie delle Batteriacee, 1889, 13; Ba- 



cillus pertussis Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 

 1900, 754.) From mucus and pus. 



Bacillus agilis Tschistowitsch. 

 (Tschistowitsch, Berl. klin. Wochnschr., 

 1892, 512; not Bacillus agilis Trevisan, I 

 generi e le specie delle Batteriacee, 1889, 

 14; not Bacillus agilis Chester, Man. 

 Determ. Bact., 1901, 226; not Bacillus 

 agilis Mattes, Sitzungsber. d. Gesellsch. 

 z. Beforderung d. gesam. Naturw. z. 

 Marburg, 62, 1927, 406; not Bacillus 

 agilis Hauduroy et al.. Diet. d. Bact. 

 Path., Paris, 1937, 33.) From pus. 



Bacillus agilis Hauduroy et al. {Ba- 

 cillus agilis larvae Toumanoff, Bull. 

 Soc. Cent, de Med. V^ter., 80, 1927, 367; 

 Hauduroy, Ehringer, Urbain, Guillot 

 and Magrou, Dictionnaire de Bact^ries 

 Pathogenes, Paris, 1937, 33.) Found in 

 foulbrood of bees. 



Bacillus agrestis Werner. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 87, 1933, 468 ; not Bacillus 

 agrestis de Rossi, Microbiol, agraria e 

 technica, Torino, 1927, 828.) One of a 

 group of species described as being able 

 to grow on a Ca n-butyrate agar. Three 

 cultures were isolated from German 

 and Italian soils. 



Bacillus agri Laubach and Rice. 

 (Jour. Bact., 1, 1916, 516.) Isolated 

 twice from soil in Baltimore. 



Bacillus agrophilus Stiihrk. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 93, 1935, 189.) Only 

 moderate growth on Ca n-butyrate agar. 

 One culture isolated from soil from Cuba. 



Bacillus agrotidis typhoides Pospelov. 

 (Rept. Bur. Appl. Ent., Russian, 3, 

 1927, 8.) Found in diseased larvae of 

 the moth, Euxoa (Agrotis) segctum. 



Bacillus {Streptobacter) albuminis 

 Schroeter. (Bacillus aus Faeces V, Bien- 

 stock, Ztschr. f. klin. Med., 8, Heft 1, 

 1884, 1 ; Schroeter, in Cohn, Kryptog. 

 Flora V. Schlesien, 3, 1, 1886, 162; Ba- 

 cillus putrificus coli Fliigge, Die Mikro- 

 organismen, 2 Aufl., 1886, 303; Bacillus 

 diaphthirus Trevisan, I generi e le specie 

 delle Batteriacee, 1889, 15.) From feces. 



Bacillus albus (Sack) Bergey et al. 

 {C elhdomonas albus Sack, Cent. f. Bakt., 

 II Abt., 62, 1924, 79; Bergey et al., Man- 



