FAMILY BACILLACEAE 



749 



but produces much slime. From drain- 

 age water. 



Bacillus mesenterioides Deetjen. (In- 

 aug. Diss., Wiirzburg, 1890.) From 

 sausage. 



Bacillus viicans Wilhelmy. (Arb. 

 bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 3, 1903, 30.) 

 From meat extract. 



Bacillus milii (sic) Howard. (Glean- 

 ings in Bee Culture, 28, 1900, 124.) From 

 black brood of the honey bee (Apzs 

 mellifera) . 



Bacillus initochrondrialis Alexeieff. 

 (Arch. f. Protist., Jfi, 1924, 399.) From 

 horse manure. 



Bacillus modestus Schieblich. (Cent, 

 f. Bakt., I Abt., Orig., 124, 1932, 269.) 

 Prefers carbohydrate media and 37°C. 

 From grass and meadow plants. 



Bacillus monachae (von Tubeuf) Eck- 

 stein. (Bacillus B, Hofmann, Die 

 Schlaffsucht (Flacherie) der Nonne 

 {Liparis monacha), 1891, Frankfort am 

 Main ; Bacterium monachae von Tubeuf, 

 Forstl. naturwissensch. Ztschr., /, 1892, 

 34, 277; Eckstein, Ztschr. f. Forst- u. 

 Jagdwesen, 26, 1894, 6.) From diseased 

 caterpillars of the nun moth (Lijmantria 

 monacha). 



Bacillus montanus Werner. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 87, 1933, 458.) Good 

 growth on Ca n-butyrate agar. One cul- 

 ture isolated from soil of Germany. 



Bacillus moulei DeToni and Trevisan. 

 (Bacille des viandes a odeur de beurre 

 ranee des halles de Paris, Nocard and 

 Moule, Recueil de m^decine vet^r., Ser. 

 7, 6, 18 — , 67; DeToni and Trevisan, in 

 Sacardo, Sylloge Fungorum, 8, 1889, 971.) 

 From spoiled meat. 



Bacillus mucilaginosus Migula. 

 (Happ, Inaug. Diss., Berlin, 1893, 28; 

 Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 696.) 

 From a slimy fermentation. 



Bacillus mucosus Zimmerman. (Bakt. 

 unserer Trink- u. Nutzwasser, Chemnitz, 

 II Reihe, 1894, 8; Bacterium mucosum 

 Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 315.) 

 From water. 



Bacillus mucronatus Saito . (Jour . Coll . 

 Sci., Imp. Univ., Tokyo, 23, Art. 15, 



1908, 58.) Isolated twice from garden 

 air. 



Bacillus multipediculus flavus Zimmer- 

 mann. (Bakt. unserer Trink- u. Nutz- 

 wasser, Chemnitz, II Reihe, 1894, 42.) 

 From water. 



Bacillus muralis Tomaschek. (Botan. 

 Zeit., 46, 1887,665.) 



Bacillus mutabilis Soriano. (Estudio 

 sistematico de algunas bacterias esporu- 

 ladas aerobias. Thesis, Univ. Buenos 

 Aires, 1935, 570.) Four strains isolated 

 from fecal matter and Argentine soils. 



Bacillus myxodens Burchard. (Arb. 

 bakt. Inst. Karlsruhe, 2, Heft 1, 1898, 

 41.) From beer yeast. 



Bacillus nebulosus Goresline. (Gores- 

 line, Jour. Bact., ^7, 1934, 72 ; not Bacillus 

 nebulosus Wright, Mem. Nat. Acad. Sci., 

 7, 1894, 465 ; not Bacillus nebulosus Halle, 

 These de Paris, 1898; not Bacillus nebu- 

 losus Vincent, Ann. Inst. Past., 21, 1907, 

 69 ; not Bacillus nebulosus gazogenes 

 Jacobson, Ann. Inst. Past., 22, 1908, 300.) 

 From a trickling filter receiving creamery 

 wastes. 



Bacillus neumanni Herter. (Microbe 

 5B, Choukevitch, Ann. Inst. Past., 25, 

 1911, 350; Herter, Just's Botan. Jahres- 

 ber., 39, 2 Abt., Heft 4, 1915, 748.) From 

 the large intestine of the horse. 



Bacillus nigrescens Bartels. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 103, 1940, 22.) Good 

 growth on media containing m/25 phenol. 

 Three strains isolated from soil. 



Bacillus nigricans Kern. (Arb. bakt. 

 Inst. Karlsruhe, 1, Heft 4, 1896, 428.) 

 From the stomach of a bird. 



Bacillus nitidis Heigener. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 53, 1935, 99.) One culture 

 isolated from soil from Washington, D. C. 



Bacillus nitri Ambroz. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., I Abt., Orig., 51, 1909, 193.) 

 Used for cytological studies because of 

 its large size. Found on gelatin plates 

 poured for the isolation of yeasts. 



Bacillus nitroxus Beijerinck. (Cent, 

 f. Bakt., II Abt., 25, 1909, 45.) In the 

 absence of air forms N gas, CO2, and N2O 

 in nitrate broth. Under aerobic condi- 



