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MANUAL OF DETERMINATIVE BACTERIOLOGY 



Bacillus sinapivagus Kossowicz. 

 (Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 28, 1909, 241.) 

 From pickles. 



Bacillus sombrosus Kern. (Arb. bakt. 

 Inst. Karlsruhe, 1, Heft 4, 1896, 429.) 

 From the stomach of a bird. 



Bacillus sorghi Burrill. (The Micro- 

 scope, 7, 1887, 321; Proc. Amer. Soc. 

 Microscopists, 1888, 193; Bacterium 

 sorghi Chester, Delaware Agr. E.xp. Sta. 

 Ann. Rept., 9, 1897, 127; Elliott and 

 Smith, Jour. Agr. Res., 38, 1928, 1.) 

 Reported to cause a disease of sorghum 

 {Holcus sorghum). 



Bacillus sotlo Paillot. (Sotto-Bacillus, 

 Ischivata, quoted from Aoki and Chi- 

 gasaki, Mitteil. d. Med. Fakul. d. k. 

 Univ. z. Tokyo, 13, 1915, 419 and U, 1915, 

 59; Bacterium sotto Metalnikov and 

 Chorine, Internat. Corn Borer Invest., 

 Sci. Repts., 1, 1928, 56; Paillot, ibid., 1, 

 1928, 77-106.) From silkworms {Bombyx 

 viori). Sotto is Japanese for "plotzlich 

 hinf alien". 



Bacillus spatiosus Saito. (Jour. Coll. 

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

 1908, 56.) Isolated once from garden air. 



Bacillus spermatozoides Eckstein. 

 (Ztschr. f. Forst- u. Jagdwesen, 26, 1894, 

 13.) From dead moths {Hyponomeuta 

 evonym,ella) . 



Bacillus sphaerosporus Beijerinck. 

 (Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 25, 1909, 45.) 

 This organism has round terminal spores 

 and produces nitrous oxide from nitrates. 

 From garden soil. 



Bacillus sphaerosporus calco-aceticus 

 Beijerinck {loc. cit., 46). A variety of 

 the above having spherical to ellipsoidal 

 spores. 



Bacillus spinosporus Soriano. (The- 

 sis, Univ. Buenos Aires, 1935, 562.) 

 Spores spinate like some strains of 

 Bacillus pohjmyxa. No gas formed. 

 One strain isolated from soil. 



Bacillus spiralis Migula. (Syst. d. 

 Bakt., 2, 1900, 624.) From water. 



Bacillus spirogyra Dobell. (Quart. 

 Jour. Micro. Sci., 53, 1909, 579 and 56, 

 1911, 434.) From large intestine of frog 

 {Rana leniporaria) and toad {Bufo vul- 

 garis) . 



Bacillus spongiosxis Aderhold and Ruh- 

 land. (Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 15, 1905, 

 376.) Found in the gum masses dis- 

 charged by cherry trees. 



Bacillus sporonemo.Schaudinn. (Arch. 

 f. Protistenkunde, 2, 1903, 421.) From 

 sea water. 



Bacillus spurius Grohmann. (Mor- 

 phologisch-biologische Beitrage zur 

 Kenntnis der Wasserstoffbakterien, In- 

 aug. Diss., Univ. Leipzig, 1923; Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 61, 1924, 267; Ruhland 

 and Grohmann, Jahrb. wissensch. 

 Botanik, 63, 1924, 321.) Oxidizes hydro- 

 gen in the presence of oxygen to form 

 water. Presumably widely distributed 

 in soil. 



Bacillus sputi Chester. (Bacillus No. 

 6, Pansini, Arch. f. path. Anat., 122, 

 1890, 442; Chester, Man. Determ. Bact., 

 1901,280.) From sputum. 



Bacillus squajniformis Saito. (Jour. 

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

 1908, 54.) Isolated 9 times from garden 

 soil. 



Bacillus stellaris Saito. (Jour. Coll. 

 Sci., Imp. Univ., Tokyo, 23, Art. 15, 1908, 

 52.) Isolated 6 times from garden air. 



Bacillus stellatus Zimmermann. (Zim- 

 mermann, Bakt. unserer Trink- u. Nutz- 

 wasser, II Reihe, 1894, 14; not Bacillus 

 stellatus Chester, Man. Determ. Bact., 

 1901, 274; not Bacillus stellatus Vincent, 

 Ann. Inst. Past., 21, 1907, 62.) From 

 water. 



Bacillus sireptoformis Migula. (Sal- 

 peter zerstorenden Bacillus, Schirokikh, 

 Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 2, 1896, 204; 

 Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 682; 

 Bacillus schirokikhi Chester, Man. De- 

 term. Bact., 1901, 252; Bacillus denitri- 

 ficans Chester, ibid., 274.) From horse 

 feces. Utilizes potassium nitrate. 



Bacillus suaveolens Sclavo and Gosio. 

 (Quoted from Omeliansky, Jour. Bact., 

 8, 1923, 398.) No source given. 



Bacillus subcuticularis Migula. 

 (Bacillus cuticularis albus Tataroff, In- 

 aug. Diss., Dorpat, 1891, 24; Migula, 

 Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 623; Bacillus 

 cuticularis Chester, Man. Determ. Bact.^ 

 ie01,285.) From water. 



