FAMILY BACILLACEAE 



745 



Geneeskunde, 21 , 1885, 110.) Associated 

 with gangrene of tooth pulp and caries of 

 teeth. 



Bacillus gasofortnans Pammel. (Pani- 

 mel, Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 2, 1896, &42; 

 not Bacillus gasofortnans Eisenberg, 

 Bakt. Diag., 3 Aufi., 1891, 107; Bacillus 

 pajnmelii Chester, Man. Determ. Bact., 

 1901,270.) From cheese. 



Bacillus gelalinosus ^Nligula. {Bac- 

 ieriurn gelatinosutn betae Glaser, Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., /, 1895, 879 ; Migula, Syst. 

 d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 805.) Produces slime 

 in sucrose solutions. Probably a variety 

 of Bacillus vulgalus according to Sac- 

 chetti (Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 95, 

 1936, 115). 



Bacillus geniculatus (Duclaux) Trevi- 

 san. (Tyrothrix geniculatus Duclaux, 

 Ann. Inst. Nat. Agron., 4, 1882, 23; 

 Trevisan, I generi e le specie delle Bat- 

 teriacee, 1889, 16; not Bacillus genicula- 

 tus De Bary, Inaug. Diss., Strassburg, 

 Leipzig, 1885; not Bacillus geniculatus 

 Wright, Mem. Nat. Acad. Sci., 7, 1894, 

 459; Bacillus gonatodes DeToni and 

 Trevisan, in Saccardo, Sylloge Fungorum, 

 8, 1889, 964; Bacterium geniculatum 

 Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 322.) 

 From milk. 



Bacillus gigas (Koch) Trevisan. 

 {Streptobacteria gigas-pericardii Billroth, 

 Die Vegetationsformen von Coccobacteria 

 septica, Berlin, 1874, 60; Streptobacteria 

 gigas Koch, in Cohn, Beitr. z. Biol. d. 

 Pflanz., 2, Heft 3, 1877, 429; Metallacter 

 gigas Trevisan, Batter, ital., 1879, 25; 

 Trevisan, Atti. d. Accad. Fis.-Med.- 

 Stat., Milan, Ser. 4, 3, 1886, 96; not 

 Bacillis gigas van der Goot, Med. Proef- 

 station voor de Java Suikerindust., pt. 

 5, No. 10, 1915, 284; not Bacillus gigas 

 Zeissler and Rassefeld, Arch. f. wiss. u. 

 prakt. Tierheilk., 59, 1929, 419.) From 

 pericardial exudate. 



Bacillus ginglymus Ravenel. (Mem. 

 Nat. Acad. Sci., 8, 1896, 37.) From soil. 



Bacillus glaciformis Wilhelmy. (Arb. 

 bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 3, 1903, 29.) 

 From meat extract. 



Bacillus globifer Bartels. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 103, 1940, 26.) Growth 

 on media containing m/100 phenol. 

 Author considers it similar to Bacillus 

 alvei. Five strains isolated from soil. 

 Bacillus gluiinis Patrick and Werk- 

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

 1933, 414.) Ferments xylan. Two 

 strains isolated from decayed apple wood. 

 Bacillus glycinophilus Rippel. (Rip- 

 pel, Arch. f. :Mikrobiol., 8, 1937, 42; also 

 see Rippel andNabel, ibid., 10, 1938,359.) 

 From intestines of cattle. Fresh cultures 

 on agar form protein from glycine and 

 glucose. 



Bacillus gussypina Stedman. (Ala- 

 bama Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui. 55, 1894, 6; 

 Earle, Alabama Agr. Exp. Sta. Bui. 107, 

 1899, 311.) Reported as cause of boll rot 

 on cotton {Gossypium sp.) 



Bacillus granularis Stiihrk. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 93, 1935, 180.) Very 

 good growth on Ca n-butyrate agar. One 

 culture isolated from garden soil in 

 Germany. 



Bacillus granulosus Russell. (Russell, 

 Ztschr. f. Hyg., 11, 1892, 194; Bacterium 

 granulosum Chester, Man. Determ. 

 Bact., 1901, 194.) From mud from the 

 Gulf of Naples. 



Bacillus grossus Migula. (Bacteri- 

 enart No. 13, Lembke, Arch. f. Hyg., 26, 

 1896, 308; Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 

 570.) From the intestines of infants. 



Bacillus gryllotalpae Metalnikov and 

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

 201, 1935, 367.) From diseased larvae of 

 the cricket {Gnjllotalpa gryllotalpa). 



Bacillus guano Stapp. (Cent. f. Bakt., 

 II Abt., 51, 1920, 29.) From soil pre- 

 viously fertilized with guano. 



Bacillus gummosus Happ. (Bakt. und 

 Chem. Untersuch. iiber die schleimige 

 Gahrung. Univ. Basel, 1893, 34; abst. 

 in Cent. f. Bakt., U, 1893, 175.) From 

 digitalis infusions. Presumably a mu- 

 coid form of a common spore-former. 

 See Bacterium gummosujn Ritsert. 



Bacillus harai Hori and Mij^ake. (Rpt. 

 Imp. Agr. Exp. Sta. Nishigahara, 38, 



