FAMILY BACILLACEAE 



815 



tiquefaciens Prevot, Man. d. Class., etc., 

 1940,141.) From milk. 



Bacillus lichenoides Piening. (Cent, 

 f. Bakt., I Abt., Orig., 124, 1932, 217; 

 not Bacillus lichenoides Grohmann, Cent, 

 f. Bakt., II Abt., 61, 1924, 267.) Cited 

 only by name, without description. 

 From dried sheep intestines used for 

 preparation of catgut sutures. 



Bacillus limosus Klein. (Ber. d. 

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

 60.) Migula (Syst. d. Bakt., 5, 1900, 640) 

 says this is probably anaerobic. Ob- 

 served in swamp water, but not culti- 

 vated on artificial media. 



Bacillus longus Chester. (Bacillus 

 muscoides colorabilis Ucke, Cent. f. 

 Bakt., I Abt., S3, 1898, 1000; Chester, 

 Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 303.) From 

 garden soil. 



Bacillus lubinskii Kruse. (Tetanus- 

 ahnlicher Bacillus, Lubinski, Cent. f. 

 Bakt., 16, 1894, 771 ; Kruse, in Fliigge, Die 

 Mikroorg., 3 Aufl., 2, 1896, 267.) From a 

 fetid human abdominal abscess in peri- 

 tonitis. 



Bacillus lyticus Costa and Troisier. 

 (Compt. rend. Soc. Biol., Paris, 78, 1915, 

 433.) From gangrenous war wounds. 

 Stated to be intermediate between Clos- 

 tridium perfringens and Clostridium 

 sepiicum. 



Bacillus macrosporus Klein. (Ber. d. 

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

 60.) Migula (Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 640) 

 says this is probably anaerobic. Ob- 

 served in swamp water, but not culti- 

 vated on artificial media. 



Bacillus makrono-filiformis Becker. 

 (Ztschr. f. Infkrnkh. d. Haust., 23, 1922, 

 20.) From a guinea pig cadaver. 



Bacillus maynionei Carbone. (Boll. 

 Sez. Ital., Soc. Intern. Microbiol., 1, 

 1929, 74.) A retting organism of doubt- 

 ful purity and anaerobic status. Culti- 

 vated from kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus) . 



Bacillus megalosporus Choukevitch. 

 (Choukevitch, Ann. Inst. Past., 25, 1911, 

 351; Hiberillus megalosporus Heller, 

 Jour. Bact., 7, 1922, 17; Inflabilis megalo- 



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

 77.) From large intestine of horse. 



Bacillus mxdtiforynis Distaso. (Dis- 

 taso. Cent. f. Bakt., I Abt., Orig., 59, 

 1911, 101; not Bacillus vndtiformis \axi 

 Senus, Dissert., Leiden, 1890, (?); Bac- 

 teroides multiformis Bergey, Manual, 1st 

 ed., 1923, 263; C illobacterium midtiforme 

 Prevot, Ann. Inst. Past., 60, 1938, 297.) 

 Stated by Distaso (loc. cit.) not to pro- 

 duce spores, but to belong probablj^ to 

 the Welch Group. From feces of dog. 



Bacillus multiformis van Senus. (van 

 Senus, Dissert., Leiden, 1890 and Koch's 

 Jahrsber., /, 1890, 138.) From mud and 

 from decomposing vegetation. 



Bacillus muscoides Liborius. (Libor- 

 ius, Ztschr. f. Hyg., 1, 1886, 163; Cornilia 

 muscoides Trevisan, I generi e le specie 

 delle Batteriacee, 1889, 22.) From mouse 

 inoculated with soil, from cheese, and 

 from bovine feces. 



Bacillus muscoides non colorabilis 

 Ucke. (Cent. f. Bakt., I Abt., 23, 1898, 

 1000.) From hay infusion. 



Bacillus nanus Romanovitch. (Compt. 

 rend. Soc. Biol., Paris, 71, 1911, 239.) 

 From human intestine. 



Bacillus nebulosus Vincent. (Ann. 

 Inst. Past., 21, 1907, 69; not Bacillus 

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

 7, 1894, 465; not Bacillus nebulosus Hall^, 

 These de Paris, 1898, 33; not Bacillus 

 nebulosus Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 

 1900, 844; not Bacillus nebulosus Gores- 

 line, Jour. Bact., 27, 1934, 52.) From 

 well and river water. 



Bacillus oedematis Migula. (Bacillus 

 cedernatis maligni Liborius, Ztschr. f. 

 Hyg., 1, 1886, 158; not Bacillus oedematis 

 maligni Zopf, Die Spaltpilze, 3 Aufl., 

 1885, 88; Migula, Syst. d. Bakt., 2, 1900, 

 604; not Bacillus oedematis Chester, 

 Man. Determ. Bact., 1901, 292.) 



Bacillus otitidis sporogenes putrificus 

 von Hibler. (Cent. f. Bakt., I Abt., 

 Orig., 68, 1913, 282.) From a human 

 brain abscess. 



Bacillus otricolare Weinberg and Gins- 

 bourg. (Bacillo otricolare, Nacciarone, 

 Riforma Med., 33, 1917, 778; Weinberg 



