FAMILY BACILLACEAE 



iOt 



intestine, water and soil. Ther- 

 mophilic. No growth below 40°C. 



Bacillus ihermophilus sojae Rokusho 

 and Fukutome. (Jour. Agr. Chem. Soc, 

 Japan, 13, 1937, 1235.) From spon- 

 taneously heating soj'-bean cake. 



Bacillus thermosuavis Beaver, loc. 

 cit., 24. Thermophilic, central spores. 

 No growth at 37°C. From commercially- 

 canned mincemeat. 



Bacillus thermotenax Beaver, loc. cit., 

 28. Thermophilic, subterminal spores. 

 Growth at 37°C and 55°C. From ground 

 horseradish. 



Bacillus thermourinalis Beaver, loc. 

 cit., 16. Thermophilic, subterminal 

 spores. No growth at 37°C. From hu- 

 man urine. 



Bacillus thermouiscidus Beaver, loc. 

 cit., 21. Thermophilic, subterminal 

 spores. No growth at 37°C. From fresh 

 pig ovary. 



Bacillus thoracis Howard. (Gleanings 

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

 black brood of the honey bee (Apis 

 mellifera). 



Bacillus tracheitis sive graphitosis 

 Krassilstschik. (Memoires de la Soc. 

 Zool. de France, 6, 1893, 2.50.) From 

 diseased larvae of the cockchafer (Melo- 

 lontha melolontha ) . 



Bacillus tricomii Trevisaa. (Bacillo 

 della gangraena senilis, Tricomi, Riv. 

 internaz. di Med. e Chir., 3, 1886, 73; 

 Trevisan, I generi e le specie delle Bat- 

 teriacee, 1889, 13; Bacterium tricomii 

 Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 310.) 

 From a case of senile gangrene. 



Bacillus trifolii Voglino. (Ann. R. 

 Accad. Agr. Torino, 39, 1896, 85. ) Patho- 

 genic for clover (Trifolium pratense, T . 

 repens, T. resupinatum) . 



Bacillus tritus Batchelor. (Jour. 

 Bact., 4, 1919, 29.) One culture from 

 feces. 



Bacillus tuberis von Wahl. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 16, 1906, 503.) From 

 cooked truffles {Tuber oestivum). 



Bacillus tuberostis Weiss. (Arb. bakt. 



Inst. Karlsruhe, 2, Heft 3, 1902, 248.) 

 From fermenting beets. 



Bacillus tubifex Dale. (Annals of 

 Bot., 26, 1912, 133.) Reported to cause a 

 leaf disease of potato {Solanum tuberosum) 

 and tomato {Lycopersicum esculentum). 



Bacillus turgidus (Duclaux) Trevisan. 

 {Tyrothrix turgidus Duclaux, Ann. Inst. 

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

 generi e le specie delle Batteriacee, 1889, 

 16.) From milk. 



Bacillus tympani-cuniculi Morcos. 

 (Jour. Bact., 23, 1932, 454.) Causes 

 tympanitis in young rabbits. 



Bacillus ubicuitarius Soriano. (Es- 

 tudio sistematico de algunas bacterias 

 esporuladas aerobias. Thesis, Univ. 

 Buenos Aires, 1935, 569.) Four cultures 

 isolated from soil. 



Bacillus ulna Cohn. (Cohn, Beitr. z. 

 Biol. d. Pflanz., 1, Heft 2, 1872, 177; also 

 see Prazmowski, Untersuch. ii. d. Ent- 

 wickelungsges. u. Fermentwirk. einiger 

 Bakterienarten, Leipzig, 1880, 20.) 

 Found once in an infusion of cooked 

 egg-white. 



Bacillus undulatus den Dooren de 

 Jong. (Bull. Assoc. Diplomes de Micro- 

 biol. Nancy, No. 26-27, 1946, 12.) From 

 soil. 



Bacillus uvaeformis Kern. (Arb. bakt. 

 Inst. Karlsruhe, 1, Heft 4, 1896, 415.) 

 From the stomachs and intestines of 

 birds. 



Bacillus vaculatus Ravenel. (Mem. 

 Nat. Acad. Sci., 8, 1896, 31.) From soil. 



Bacillus validus Heigener. (Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 93, 1935, 97.) Four 

 cultures isolated from soil from Ger- 

 many, Cuba, and Egypt. 



Bacillus valinovorans Heigener. 

 (Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 93, 1935, 104.) 

 Good growth on valine agar. Five strains 

 isolated from soils from Egypt, Germany, 

 Italy, and Palestine. 



Bacillus varians Saito. (Jour. Coll. 

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

 1908, 50.) Isolated 11 times from gar- 

 den air. 



Bacillus ventricosus Heigener. (Cent. 



