826 



MANUAL OF DETERMINATIVE BACTERIOLOGY 



Bacillus liquefaciens viagnus Liideritz. 

 From mice and guinea pigs inoculated 

 with garden soil. 



Bacillus nonfermentans Hall and White- 

 head. From poisoned African arrow- 

 heads. 



Bacillus oedematis sporogenes Sordelli. 

 From human gaseous gangrene. 



Bacillus ■putrificus tenuis Zeissler. 

 From malignant edema of various animals 

 and from human gaseous gangrene. 



Bacillus sporogenes foetidus Chouke- 

 vitch. From large intestine of horse. 



Clostridium foetidum Liborius. From 

 mice inoculated with garden soil. 



Clostridium foetidum carnis Sal us. 

 From human feces by enrichment in 

 meat mash medium. 



Clostridium oedematoides Meleney, 

 Humphreys and Carp. From a case of 

 human post-operative gaseous gangrene. 



24. Clostridium perfringens Holland. 



Bacille du rhumatisme, Achalme. Iso- 

 lated by blood culture from human cases 

 of acute articular rheumatism. 



Bacillus amylobacter immobilis Gratz 

 and Vas. From Liptauer cheese. 



Bacillus cadaveris Sternberg. From 

 liver and kidney of a yellow fever cadaver. 



Bacillus cadaveris butyricus Buday. 

 From organs of human cadavers undergo- 

 ing postmortem emphysema. 



Bacillus egens Stoddard. From muscle 

 in a fatal case of human gaseous gangrene. 



Bacillus emphysematis maligni Wick- 

 lein. From human gaseous gangrene. 



Bacillus emphysematis vaginae Linden- 

 thai. From human kolpohyperplasia 

 cystica or vaginitis emphysematosa. 



Bacillus multiformis Distaso. From 

 feces of dog. 



Bacillus ovitoxicus Bennetts. From 

 blood, tissues and organs of sheep in 

 Australia dying of entero-toxemia. 



Bacillus paludis McEwen. From in- 

 testines and viscera of sheep in the 

 Romney Marsh in England suffering from 

 a disease called struck. 



Bacillus perfringens Veillon and Zuber. 

 Originally isolated from pus in human 



appendicitis; later from a variety of 

 sources. 



Bacillus phlegmones emphysematosae 

 Fraenkel. From human gaseous phleg- 

 mons; later from a variety of related 

 conditions of human beings and animals. 



Bacillus zoodysentriae hungaricus 

 Detre. Isolated in Hungary from intes- 

 tines of diarrheal pigs and lambs. 



Clostridium perfringens var. anaero- 

 genes Hauduroy et al. An unnamed cul- 

 ture isolated by Grooten by blood culture 

 from a fatal human septicemia. 



Granulobacillus saccharobutyricus im- 

 mobilis liquefaciens Schattenfroh and 

 Grassberger. Originally isolated from 

 market milk; later from cheese, soil, 

 water, human and animal feces, and 

 from various grain meals. 



29. Clostridiumparaputrificum Snyder. 



Bacillus innutritus Kleinschmidt. 

 From stools of newborn infants. 



Plectridium fluxum Pr^vot. From 

 feces of nursing newborn infants. 



Plectridium nonum Prdvot. From em- 

 physematous muscle of an amputated 

 human arm. 



41. Clostridium lentoputrescens Hart^ 

 sell and Rettger. 



Bacillus cadaveris sporogenes (anaero- 

 bicus) Klein. From normal intestines of 

 man and animals. 



Bacillus radiatus Liideritz. From 

 mice and guinea pigs inoculated with 

 garden soil. 



Bacillus tetanoides (B) Adamson. 

 From human septic and gangrenous war 

 wounds. 



43. Clostridium tetanomorphum Ber- 



gey et al. 



Bacillus frag His Veillon and Zuber. 

 From human cases of purulent appendi- 

 citis. 



Bacillus ramosus Veillon and Zuber. 

 From human cases of purulent appendici- 

 tis and from pulmonary gangrene. 



45. Clostridium angulosum Hauduroy 

 et al. 



