746 



MANUAL OF DETERMINATIVE BACTERIOLOGY 



1911, 69.) Pathogenic for willow {Salix 

 sp.). 



Bacillus hessii (Guillebeau) Kruse. 

 {Bacterium hessii Guillebeau, Landw. 

 Jahrb. d. Schweiz, 5, 1891, 138; Kruse, in 

 Fliigge, Die Mikroorganismen, 3 Aufl., 2, 

 1896, 210.) There is some question 

 whether the original culture was a spore- 

 former or whether it was mixed with one 

 of the common slimy milk organisms. 

 From slimy milk. 



Bacillus iiirudinis Schweizer. (Arch, 

 f. Mikrobiol., 7, 1936, 235.) From the 

 digestive slime of leeches (Hirudo medi- 

 cinalis and Hirudo officinalis) . 



Bacillus hollandicus Stapp. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 51, 1920, 47.) From soil 

 from Delft. 



Bacillus hoplosternus Paillot. (Compt. 

 rend. Acad. Sci., Paris, 163, 1916, 774; 

 Ann. Inst. Past., S3, 1919,403.) Isolated 

 once from the body fluid of a June bug. 

 Pathogenic for several species of insects. 



Bacilhis iviminutus McBeth. (Soil 

 Sci., 1, 1916, 455.) Growth only in the 

 presence of cellulose. From ten different 

 soils of California. 



Bacillus immohilis Steinhaus. (Jour. 

 Bact., Jt2, 1941, 783.) The author states 

 that it probably belongs to the Bacillus 

 adhaerens group. From rectum of larvae 

 of the sphinx moth {Ceratomia catalpae). 



Bacillus iniomarinus ZoBell and Up- 

 ham. (Bull. Scripps Inst, of Oceanog- 

 raphy, Univ. Calif., 5, 1944, 265.) Sub- 

 terminal spores. From marine bottom 

 deposits in shoal waters. 



Bacillus indifferens Soriano. (Thesis, 

 Univ. Buenos Aires, 1935, 565.) One 

 strain isolated from soil . 



Bacillus infantilis Kendall. (Jour. 

 Biol. Chem., 5, 1909, 419 and 439.) From 

 the intestine in cases of infantilism. 

 Saprophj^tic. 



Bacillus intermittens Wilhelmy. (Arb. 

 bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 3, 1903, 23.) 

 From meat extract. 



Bacillus intrapallans Forbes. (Bull. 

 Illinois State Lab. Natur. Hist., Art. 

 IV, 1886, 283, 288 and 297.) 



Bacillus jubatus Bartels. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 103, 1940, 24.) Very 

 good growth on media containing m/50 

 phenol. Nine strains isolated from soil. 



Bacillus kaleidoscopicus Wilhelmy. 

 (Arb. bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 3, 1903, 31.) 

 From meat extract. 



Bacillus kefir Kuntze. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., U, 1909, 116.) From 

 kefir, a Caucasian milk beverage. 



Bacillus kermesinus Migula. (Kar- 

 minroter Bacillus, Tataroff, Inaug. Diss., 

 Dorpat, 1891, 67; Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 

 2, 1900, 858.) From water. 



Bacillus kildini Issatchenko. (Re- 

 cherchcs sur les Microbes de I'Ocdan 

 Glacial Arctique. Petrograd, 1914.) 

 From sea water. 



Bacillus koubassoffii Chester. (Bacil- 

 lus der krebsartigen Neubildungen, 

 Koubassoff, Vortrag. Moskauer Mili- 

 tiirarztlichen Verein, 1888, No. 22; abst. 

 in Cent. f. Bakt., 7, 1890, 317; Chester, 

 Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 282.) From 

 cancerous growths of the human stomach. 



Bacillus lacca Kern. (Arb. bakt. Inst. 

 Karlsruhe, 1, Heft 4, 1896, 411.) From 

 the stomachs and intestines of birds. 



Bacillus lactis-albus Chester. {Bacil- 

 lus lactis albus Sternberg, Man. of Bact., 

 1893, 680; Chester, Man. Determ. Bact., 

 1901,277.) From milk. 



Bacillus lactucae Voglino. (Ann. R. 

 Accad. Agr. Torino, 4(>, 1903, 25.) Patho- 

 genic for lettuce {Lactuca saliva). 



Bacillus lasiocampa Brown. (Amer. 

 Museum Novitates, No. 251, 1927, 7.) 

 Said to belong to Bacillus subtilis group. 

 From ovaries and egg tubes of tent cater- 

 pillar moth. 



Bacillus latvianus Kalnins. (Latvijas 

 Univ. Raksti, Serj^a I, No. 11, 1930, 265.) 

 Cellulose attacked at 34°C but not at 

 37°C. Probably from soil. 



Bacillus lautus Batchelor. (Jour. 

 Bact., //, 1919, 30.) One culture from 

 feces. 



Bacillus legrosii Hauduroy et al. 

 (Legros, These Med. Paris, 1902; Haudu- 

 roy et al., Diet. d. Bact. Path., 1937, 43.) 



