Page:Bergey's manual of determinative bacteriology.djvu/371

 broth. Source: Five strains were isolated from Broth: Turbid, with sediment. No pellicle Methyl red test is positive, formed. Citric acid, as well as sodium alginate, Litmus milk: Acid after 24 hours. .^^ be used as a sole source of carbon. Potato: Abundant, yellowish gray growth. t^t-^ ■. 11/. -, ., , , ^ , , 6 j& Nitrites produced from nitrates. Indole not produced. t^, , Hydrogen sulfide production is abundant. ^^^^'^ '^^^^"^ ^° hemolysis. Alginic acid is decomposed with the Aerobic, facultatively anaerobic, production of acid and gas. Temperature relations: Optimum, 30° C; Acid and gas from glucose and lactose good growth at 37° C; grows at 4° and (slow). Acid from fructose, arabinose, 45° C. galactose, raffinose, xylose, maltose, su- Chemical tolerance: Grows at pH 9.6. crose, salicin, glycerol, dulcitol, iso-dulci- r',^^ . i^ a ^^,. „„..+ ^^- ^ 1,1 ■ i, ' • , , , • , , • . Grows in per cent sodium chloride tol, manmtol and sorbitol; de.xtnn is usually attacked. No acid from starch or inulin. Acetylmethylcarbinol is produced soil. (faintly). Habitat: Presumably soil. TRIBE II. ERWINIEAE WINSLOW ET AL., 1920. (Jour. Bact., 5, 1920, 209.) Er.wi.ni'e.ae. M.L. fem.n. Erwinia type genus of the tribe; -eae ending to denote a tribe; M.L. fem.pl.n. Erwinieae the Erwinia tribe. Characters as for the genus. There is a single genus. Genus VI. Erwinia Winslow et al., 1917* (Jour. Bact., 2, 1917, 560.) Er.wi'ni.a. M.L. gen. noun Erwinia of Erwin; named for Erwin F. Smith, pioneer Ameri- can plant pathologist. Motile rods which normally do not require organic nitrogen compounds for growth. Pro- duce acid with or without visible gas from a variety of sugars. In some species the number of carbon compounds attacked is limited, and lactose may not be fermented. May or may not liquefy gelatin. May or may not produce nitrites from nitrates. Invade the tissues of living plants and produce dry necroses, galls, wilts and soft rots. In the latter case, a proto- pectinase destroj-s the middle lamellar substance. The type species is Erwinia amylovora (Burrill) Winslow et al. Key to the species of genus Erwinia. I.f Pathogens that cause dry necroses, galls or wilts in plants but not a soft rot {Erwinia sensu stricto). York, July, 1954. t The genus Erwinia as defined here is heterogeneous in nature and is composed of at least two distinct groups. The first group constitutes Erwinia proper and does not produce visible gas from sugars. Waldee (Iowa State Coll. Jour. Sci., 19, 1945, 435) has suggested that the species in this first group be placed in a separate family, Erwiniaceae.
 * Completely revised by Prof. Walter H. Burkholder, Cornell University, Ithaca, New