742 



MANUAL OF DETERMINATIVE BACTERIOLOGY 



eentric opaque or semi-opaque and 

 transparent zones. 



Bacillus danteci Kruse. (Bacille rouge 

 de Terre-Neuve, Le Dantec, Ann. Inst. 

 Past., 5, 1891, 662; Kruse, in Flugge, Die 

 Mikroorganismen, 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 270.) 

 From reddened salt cod fish. 



Bacillus daucarum von Wahl. (Cent. 

 f. Bakt., II Abt., 16, 1906, 494.) Appar- 

 ently a strain of Bacillus subtilis. From 

 canned carrots. 



Bacillus demmei Trevisan. (Bacillus 

 der Erythema nodosum, Demme, Fort- 

 schr. d. Med., 6, 1888, 257; Trevisan, I 

 generi e le specie delle Batteriacee, 1889, 

 14 ; Bacillus erythematis Kruse, in Fliigge, 

 Die ]Mikroorganismen, 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 

 426; Bacillus erythematis maligni Kruse, 

 ihid., 479; Bacterium erythematis Migula, 

 Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 346.) From 

 erythema nodosum (skin). 



Bacillus dendroides Holzmtiller. 

 (Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 23, 1909, 331.) 

 From frog feces. Closely related to 

 Bacillus mxjcoides. 



Bacillus dendroides Thornton. 

 (Thornton, Ann. Appl. Biol., 9, 1922, 

 247; not Bacillus dendroides Holzmiiller, 

 loc. cit.) Common in Rothamsted soil. 

 Said to belong to the Bacillus subtilis 

 group. 



Bacillus dentatus Heigener. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 93, 1935, 106.) Good 

 growth on valine agar. Two cultures iso- 

 lated from soil of Jugoslavia and North 

 Carolina. 



Bacillus destruens von Wahl. (Cent. 

 f. Bakt., II Abt., 16, 1906, 502.) From 

 boiled asparagus. 



Bacillus detrudens Wright . (Mem . Nat . 

 Acad. Sci., 7, 1895, 452.) From water. 



Bacillus diastalicus Boyarska. (Iz- 

 vestia Acad. Sci., U. S. S. R., Biol. Ser., 

 1941.) Thermophilic. 



Bacillus disciformans Zimmermann. 

 (Zimmermann, Bakt. unserer Trink. u. 

 Nutzwasser, Chemnitz, II Reihe, 1894, 

 48; Bacterium disciformans Lehmann 

 and Neumann, Bakt. Diag., 1 Aufl., 2, 

 1896, 238.) From waste water. Appar- 

 ently not identical with Bacillus disci- 



formis Grafenhan, although the name 

 suggests possible relationship. 



Bacillus disciformis Grafenhan. (In- 

 aug. Diss., Halle, 1891, 1.) From water. 

 From the description, this organism may 

 be Bacillus subtilis. 



Bacillus distortus (Duclaux) Trevisan. 

 {Tyrothrix distortus Duclaux, Ann. Inst. 

 Nat. Agron., 4, 1882, 23; Trevisan, I 

 generi e le specie delle Batteriacee, 1889, 

 16.) From milk. 



Bacillus dobelli Duboscq and Grass^. 

 (Arch. Zool. Exper. et G^n., 66, 1927, 

 487; Bacillus (Flexilis) dobelli Duboscq 

 and Grassd, ibid., 487.) Similar to Ba- 

 cillus flexilis Dobell. Found in rectum 

 of a termite {Calotermes (Glyptotermes) 

 iridipennis). These authors suggest 

 that Bacillus flexilis Dobell, Bacillus 

 bulschlii Schaudinn and Bacillus dobelli 

 be grouped under the name Flexilis. 



Bacillus duclauxii (Miquel) Chester. 

 (Bacillus ureae Miquel, Bull. Soc. Chim. 

 d. Paris, 31, 1879, 391; Urobacillus du- 

 clauxii sive Bacillus ureae /3 Miquel, 

 Ann. d. ]\Iicrog., 2, 1889-1890, 53, 122 

 and 145; Chester, Ann. Rept. Del. Col. 

 Agr. Exp. Sta., 10, 1898, 123.) From 

 water and soil. 



Bacillus dysodes Zopf. (Die Spalt- 

 pilze, 3 Aufl., 1885,' 90.) From ferment- 

 ing dough. 



Bacillus elegans Heigener. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 93, 1935, 103.) Four 

 cultures isolated from soil, one from 

 Jugoslavia and three from Germany. 



Bacillus emulsionis Beijerinck. (Folia 

 Microbiol., 1, 1912, 377; see Perquin, 

 Jour. Microbiol, and Serol., 6, 1940, 226.) 

 Produces slime in sucrose solutions. 



Bacillus encephaloides Trevisan. (Ba- 

 cille de I'air /, Babes, in Cornil and 

 Babes, Les Bacteries, 1886, 150 ; Trevisan, 

 I generi e le specie delle Batteriacee, 

 1889,20.) From the air. 



Bacillus enterothrix Collin. (Arch. 

 Zool. Exp(5r. et G^n., 51, 1913, Notes and 

 Revue, No. 3.) Found in the rectum of 

 toad tadpoles (Alytes sp.). 



Bacillus epidermidis (Bizzozero) Bor- 

 doni-Uffreduzzi. (Leptothrix epidermi- 



