Page:Bergey's manual of determinative bacteriology.djvu/86

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
64
ORDER I. PSEUDOMONADALES

may be found as elements in chains for the greater part composed of normal individuals.

Habitat: Mud and stagnant water containing rather high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide and exposed to light; sulfur springs.

Illustrations: Szafer, op. cit., 1910, Pl. VI, fig. 5; Perfiliev, Jour. Microbiol. (Russian), 1, 1914, Pl. II, fig. 1, 5-12; Lauterborn, op. cit., 1915, Pl. III, fig. 33.


2. Pelodictyon aggregatum Perfiliev, 1914. (Aphanothece luteola Schmidle, Beihefte Botan. Cent., 10, 1901, 179; Perfiliev, Jour. Microbiol. (Russian), 1, 1914, 197.)

ag.gre.ga′tum. L. part. adj. aggregatus added to a flock, aggregated, clumped.

Cells usually rod-shaped, about 1 to 1.5 by 2 to 4 microns, often vacuolated, producing slime capsules and united into irregularly shaped, three-dimensional colonies in which the cells are more or less tightly packed without orderly arrangement. Colonies may attain a size of up to 1 mm; frequently they are not fully compact but contain less dense areas or appear perforated, thus forming transition stages to Pelodictyon clathratiforme. Non-motile.

Color: Yellowish green.

Abnormal cell forms (involution forms) usually in the shape of elongated and curved, forked or club-shaped and swollen rods, occasionally suggesting branching at extremities.

Source: Isolated from sulfureted water in Europe; also reported by Button and Juday (Ecology, 25, 1944, 277) from Scaffold Lake, Wisconsin.

Habitat: Mud and stagnant water containing rather high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide and exposed to light; sulfur springs.

Illustrations: Perfiliev, ibid., Pl. II, fig. 2; Lauterborn, Verhandl. naturhistor.-medizin. Vereins, Heidelberg, N.F. 13, 1915, Pl. Ill, fig. 29-31.


3. Pelodictyon parallelum (Szafer, 1910) Perfiliev, 1914. ('Aphanothece parallela Szafer, Bull. Acad. Sci., Cracovie, Sér. B, 3, 1910, 163; Perfiliev, Jour. Microbiol. (Russian), 1, 1914, 198.)

pa.ral.le′lum. Gr. adj. parallelus parallel.

Cells rather small, spherical to ovoid, or even rod-shaped; about 0.5 to 1 by 1 to 3 microns, occurring in chains and forming flat, plate-like, two-dimensional aggregates in which the chains are arranged as parallel strands. Non-motile.

Color: Yellowish green.

Abnormal cell forms not specifically mentioned, but likely to occur and to resemble those of other species.

This species may well be a special growth-form of Chlorobium limicola.

Habitat: Mud and stagnant water containing rather high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide and exposed to light; sulfur springs.

Illustrations: Szafer, op. cit., 1910, Pl. VI, fig. 7; Perfiliev, op. cit., 1914, Pl. II, fig. 2.


Genus III. Clathrochloris Geitler, 1925.

(Geitler, in Pascher, Die Süsswasserflora Deutschlands, Österreichs und der Schweiz, Jena, 12, 1925, 457.)

Clath.ro.chlo′ris. L. pl. noun clathri lattice; Gr. adj. chlorus green; M.L. fem. n. Clathrochloris green lattice.

Sulfur green bacteria of small size, generally spherical and arranged in chains which are united into loose, trellis-shaped aggregates, somewhat similar to those of Pelodictyon clathratiforme and Pelodictyon aggregatum. Cells usually contain sulfur globules. Color is yellowish green. Non-motile.

The type species is Clathrochloris sulphurica (Szafer) Geitler.


1. Clathrochloris sulphurica (Szafer, 1910) Geitler, 1925. (Aphanothece sulphurica Szafer, Bull. Acad. Sci., Cracovie, Sér. B, 3, 1910, 162; Geitler, Die Süsswasserflora Deutschlands, Österreichs und der Schweiz, Jena, 12, 1925, 457.)