FAMILY BACILLACEAE 



813 



Acuformis immohilis Prevot. {Bacil- 

 lus putrificus immohilis Distaso, Ann. 

 Inst. Past., 23, 1909, 955; Palmula im- 

 mohilis Prevot, Ann. Inst. Past., 61, 1938, 

 89; Prevot, Man. d. Class., etc., 1940, 

 165.) From intestine of the flying fox 

 {Pteropus). 



Amylohacter hutylicus Duclaux. (Ann. 

 Inst. Past., 9, 1895, 813.) From ferment- 

 ing macerated potato inoculated with soil. 



Amylohacter ethylicus Duclaux. (Ann. 

 Inst. Past., 9, 1895, 814.) Probably only 

 a facultative anaerobe. From ferment- 

 ing macerated potato inoculated with 

 soil. 



Bacillus acidi acetici Thoni. (Thesis, 

 Bern, 1906, (?) ; quoted from McCoy and 

 McClung, The Anaer. Bact. etc., 2, 1939, 

 413.) Source not known. 



Bacillus aerogenes gangrenosae Wein- 

 berg and Ginsbourg. (Bacillo aerogene 

 gangrenosa, Xacciarone, Riforma Med., 

 33, 1917, 778; Weinberg and Ginsbourg, 

 Bull. Inst. Past., 23, 1925, 825.) From 

 human gaseous gangrene. 



Bacillus amijloclasticus Renshaw and 

 Fairbrother. {Bacillus amyloclasticus 

 intestinalis Renshaw and Fairbrother, 

 Brit. Med. Jour., /, 1922, 675; ibid., 818.) 

 Stated by authors to be a facultative 

 anaerobe. From intestine of diabetic 

 persons. 



Bacillus anaerohic No. VIII Chester. 

 (Anaerobe No. VIII, Sanfelice, Ztschr. f. 

 Hyg., 14, 1893,375; Pseudo-Rauschbrand- 

 bacillus, Kruse, in Fliigge, Die Mikroorg., 

 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 250; Chester, Man. Det. 

 Bact., 1901, 296.) From putrefying meat 

 infusions, soil, and from tissues of guinea 

 pigs after inoculation with soil. 



Bacillus hutyricus Botkin. (Botkin, 

 Ztschr. f. Hyg., 11, 1892, 421; Bacillus 

 No. I, Fliigge, Ztschr. f. Hyg., 17, 1894, 

 290; Bacillus hotkini Migula, Syst. d. 

 Bakt., 2, 1900, 594; Bacillus parabutyri- 

 cus LeBlaye and Guggenheim, Man. Prat, 

 de Diag. Bact., 1914, 324; not Bacillus 

 parabutyricus Gratz and Vas, Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 41, 1914, 510; Clostridium 

 hutyricum Holland, Jour. Bact., 5, 1920, 

 217 and 222.) From milk. 



Bacillus hutyricus dimorphus Rocchi. 

 (Cent. f. Bakt., I Abt., Grig., 60, 1911, 

 580.) A collective name for a group of 

 butyric anaerobes considered denaturable 

 and mutually interconvertible. 



Bacillus cadaveris grandis Sternberg. 

 (Researches relating to the etiology and 

 prevention of yellow fever, Washington, 

 1891, 213.) From liver of a yellow fever 

 cadaver. 



Bacillus cannabinus Makrinow and 

 Tchijowa. (Arch. Sci. Biol. (Russ.), ^5, 



1929, 52; also Cent. f. Bakt., II Abt., 80, 



1930, 59.) Stated by the authors to be a 

 facultative anaerobe. From soil and from 

 retting of kenaf {Hibiscus cannabinus). 



Bacillus cincinnatus Gerstner. (Gerst- 

 ner, Thesis, Basel, 1894, 17; Bacillus 

 Cincinnati Jungano and Distaso, Les 

 Anaerobies, 1910, 88.) From soil and 

 sewage. 



Bacillus clavatus Migula. (Anaerobe 

 No. Ill, Flugge, Ztschr. f. Hyg., 17, 1894, 

 289; Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 597; 

 Bacillus cuneatus Chester, Man. Determ. 

 Bact., 1901, 299.) From boiled cow's 

 milk. 



Bacillus colicogenes Tissier. (Ann. 

 Inst. Past., 26, 1912, 523.) From stool 

 of an infant with diarrhea and colic. 



Bacillus coprogencs Hopffe. {Bacillus 

 coprogenes foetidus Herfeldt, Cent. f. 

 Bakt., II Abt., 1, 1895, 77; not Bacillus 

 coprogenes foetidus Fliigge, Die Mikro- 

 org., 2 Aufl., 1886, 305; Hopfi"e, Ztschr. 

 Infkrnkh. u. Hyg. Haust., 14, 1913, 404.) 

 From manure and from horse intestine. 



Bacillus cresologenes Rhein. (Rhein, 

 Compt. rend. Soc. Biol., Paris, 87, 1922, 

 576; Clostridium cresologenes Prevot, 

 Ann. Inst. Past., 61, 1938, 85.) From 

 brain medium inoculated with soil. 



Bacillus de baryanus Klein. (Ber. d. 

 Deuts. Bot. Gesellsch., 7 (Bhft.), 1889, 

 60.) Migula (Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 

 640) says this is probably anaerobic. 

 Observed in swamp water, but not culti- 

 vated on artificial media. 



Bacillus diffrangens Gerstner. (The- 

 sis, Basel, 1894, 19.) From soil and 

 sewage. 



