FAMILY BACILLACEAE 



741 



Bacillus cirroflagellosus ZoBell and 

 Upham. (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Oceanog- 

 raphy, Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 266.) Cen- 

 tral spores. Found in marine mud. 



Bacillus cladoi Trevisan. (Bacille pe- 

 duncul^, Clado, Bull. Soc. Anat. Paris, 

 1887, 339; Trevisan, I generi e le specie 

 delle Batteriacee, 1889, 14; Bacillus 

 pendunculatus (sic) Eisenberg, Bakt. 

 Diag., 3 Aufi., 1891, 340; Bacillus sepiicus 

 vesicae Sternberg, Man. of Bact., 1893, 

 475.) From urine in a case of cystitis. 



Bacillus closteroides Gray and Thorn- 

 ton. (Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 73, 1928, 

 93.) Decomposes phenol. Probably 

 identical with or a variety of Bacillus 

 circidans. Sixteen strains isolated from 

 Rothamsted soils. 



Bacillus coccineus Pansini. (Pansini, 

 Arch. f. path. Anat., 122, 1890, 437; 

 not Bacillus coccineus Catiano, in Cohn, 

 Beitr. z. Biol. d. Pflanzen, 7, 1896, 339.) 

 From sputum. Red pigment. 



Bacillus colorans Libermann. (Jour, 

 of Microbiol., Ukraine, 5, 1938, 73; abst. 

 in Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 101, 1940, 81.) 

 From fruit conserves containing 10 to 20 

 per cent sugar. 



Bacillus comesii Rossi. (Ann. d. 

 Scuola d. Agricult. in Portici, 1903; 

 Arch, di Farmacologia sperim., 3, 1904, 

 fasc. 10.) Similar to Bacillus mesen- 

 tericus. Said to have the abilitj' to 

 dissolve plant particles. 



Bacillus concoctans Patrick and Werk- 

 man. (Iowa State Coll. Jour. Sci., 7, 

 1933, 415.) Ferments xylan. One cul- 

 ture isolated from soil. 



Bacillus conjunctivitidis subtiliformis 

 Michalski. (Cent. f. Bakt., I Abt., 

 Orig., 36, 1904, 212.) From more than 50 

 cases of acute conjunctivitis. Similar to 

 Bacillus subtilis. 



Bacillus consolidus Stiihrk. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 93, 1935, 191.) Good 

 growth on Ca n-butyrate agar. One 

 strain isolated from Cuban soil. 



Bacillus contextus Migula. {Bacillus 

 D, Peters, Botan. Zeitung, 47, 1889; 

 Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 522.) 

 From leaven. 



Bacillus corrugatus Migula. {Bacillus 

 viesentericus vulgalus Fliigge, Die Mikro- 

 organismen, 2 Aufl., 1886, 322; Bacillus 

 Xo. II, Fliigge, Ztschr. f. Hyg., 17, 1894, 

 294; Bacillus lactis No. II, Kruse, in 

 Fliigge, Die Mikroorganismen, 3 Aufi., 

 2, 1896, 208; iMigula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 

 1900, 583.) From milk. 



Bacillus corruscans Schroeter. (In 

 Cohn, Kryptog. Flora v. Schlesien, 3, 

 1, 1886 r 158.) From cooked potato. 



Bacillus costatus Lloyd. (Jour. Bact., 

 21, 1931, 94.) From sea water off Scot- 

 land. Nitrates and nitrites reduced to 

 nitrogen. 



Bacillus crinatus Chester. (Bacillus 

 No. 5, Pansini, Arch. f. path. Anat., 

 122, 1890, 441; Chester, Man. Determ. 

 Bact., 1901, 281.) From sputum. 



Bacillus crinitus Wright. (Wright, 

 Mem. Nat. Acad. Sci., 7, 1895, 453; 

 Bacterium crinatum (sic) Chester, Man. 

 Determ. Bact., 1901, 192.) From river 

 water. 



Bacillus crystalloides Dyar. (Dyar, 

 Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci., 8, 1895, 371; 

 Bacterium crystaloides (sic) Chester, 

 Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 191.) From 

 the air. 



Bacillus cubensis Stiihrk. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 93, 1935, 192.) Good 

 growth on Ca n-butyrate agar. Two 

 cultures isolated from soils from Cuba. 



Bacillus cystiformis Trevisan. (Ba- 

 cille cystiforme, Clado, Bull. Soc. Anat. 

 Paris, 1887, 339; Trevisan, I generi e le 

 specie delle Batteriacee, 1889, 14.) From 

 urine in a case of cystitis. 



Bacillus cytaseus McBeth and Scales. 

 (U. S. Dept. Agr., Bur. Plant Industry, 

 Bull. 266, 1913, 39; Bacterium cytaseum 

 Holland, Jour. Bact., 5, 1920, 218.) 

 Requires cellulose for best growth. From 

 decomposing materials and soil. 



Bacillus cytaseus var. zonalis Keller- 

 man et al. (Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 39, 

 1913,511.) From soil from Utah. While 

 no spores were observed, this organism 

 was like Bacillus cytaseus except that 

 colonies on cellulose agar showed con- 



