The Project Gutenberg eBook of Bacteria
Title: Bacteria
Author: Sir George Newman
Release date: April 25, 2015 [eBook #48793]
Most recently updated: October 24, 2024
Language: English
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THE SCIENCE SERIES 1. The Study of Man.—By A. C. Haddon. Illustrated, 8o, $2.00. 2. The Groundwork of Science.—By St. George Mivart. 8o, $1.75. 3. Rivers of North America.—By Israel C. Russell. Illustrated, 8o, $2. 00. 4. Earth Sculpture.—By James Geikie. Illustrated, 8o, $2.00. 5. Volcanoes.—By T. G. Bonney. Illustrated, 8o, $2.00. 6. Bacteria.—By George Newman. Illustrated, 8o, $ ? G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS, New York and London |
EDITED BY |
BACTERIA
BACTERIA
ESPECIALLY AS THEY ARE RELATED
TO THE ECONOMY OF NATURE
TO INDUSTRIAL PROCESSES
AND TO THE PUBLIC HEALTH
BY
GEORGE NEWMAN
M.D., F.R.S. (Edin.), D.P.H. (Camb.), etc.
DEMONSTRATOR OF BACTERIOLOGY IN KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON
ILLUSTRATED
NEW YORK
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
LONDON
JOHN MURRAY
1899
Copyright, 1899
BY
G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS
The Knickerbocker Press, New York
PREFACE
The present volume is not a record of original work, nor is it a text-book for the laboratory. Theoretical and practical text-books of Bacteriology plentifully exist both in England and America. There are two large works widely used, one by Professor Crookshank, entitled Bacteriology and Infective Diseases, the other by Dr. Sternberg, A Manual of Bacteriology. There are also, in English, a number of smaller works by Abbott, Ball, Hewlett, Klein, Macfarland, Muir and Ritchie, and Sims Woodhead. This book is of a less technical nature. It is an attempt, in response to the editor of the series, to set forth a popular scientific statement of our present knowledge of bacteria. Popular science is a somewhat dangerous quantity with which to deal. On the one hand it may become too popular, on the other too technical. It is difficult to escape the Scylla and Charybdis in such a voyage.
I am much indebted to Professor Crookshank, who, in reading the manuscript, has helped me by many valuable criticisms. My thanks are also due to Sir C. T. D. Acland, Bart., for many kind suggestions, and to Mr. E. J. Spitta, M.R.C.S., who has been good enough to take a number of excellent photo-micrographs for me. Some other illustrations have been derived from the Atlas of Bacteriology, brought out jointly by Messrs. Slater and Spitta. For these also I am glad to have an opportunity of expressing my thanks. It should be understood that the outline drawings are only of a diagrammatic nature.
GEORGE NEWMAN.
London, 1899.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
Introduction | ix |
| CHAPTER I | |
The Biology of Bacteria | 1 |
| CHAPTER II | |
Bacteria in Water | 37 |
| CHAPTER III | |
Bacteria in the Air | 96 |
| CHAPTER IV | |
Bacteria and Fermentation | 111 |
| CHAPTER V | |
Bacteria in the Soil | 137 |
| CHAPTER VI | |
Bacteria in Milk, Milk Products, and Other Foods | 178 |
| CHAPTER VII | |
The Question of Immunity and Antitoxins | 240 |
| CHAPTER VIII | |
Bacteria and Disease | 264 |
| CHAPTER IX | |
Disinfection | 322 |
Appendix | 337 |
ILLUSTRATIONS
[Illustrations starred (*) are reproduced by permission of the Scientific Press from Drs. Spitta and Slater's Atlas of Bacteriology.]
| PAGE | |
Various Forms of Bacteria | 9 |
Sarcina | 10 |
Normal and Pleomorphic Forms of Tubercle | 13 |
Bacilli, Showing Flagella | 15 |
Various Forms of Spore Formation and Flagella | 18 |
Potato in a Roux Tube Prepared for Cultivation | 22 |
Staphylococcus Pyogenes Aureus Incubator | to face 22 |
Culture Media Ready for Inoculation | 23 |
Inoculating Needles | 24 |
Pasteur's Large Incubator for Cultivation at Room Temperature | to face 24 |
Method of Producing Hydrogen by Kipp's Apparatus for Cultivation of Anaërobes | 27 |
Anaërobic Culture | 28 |
Koch's Steam Steriliser | 31 |
Levelling Apparatus for Koch's Plate | 40 |
Moist Chamber in which Koch's Plates are Incubated | 41 |
Hot-Air Steriliser | 42 |
The Hanging Drop | 44 |
Drying Stage for Fixing Films | 45 |
Types of Liquefaction of Gelatine | 47 |
Wolfhügel's Counter | 49 |
Petri's Dish | 50 |
Berkefeld Filter | 52 |
Apparatus for Filtering Water to Facilitate its Bacteriological Examination | to face 52 |
Bacteria of Typhoid Fever | 56 |
Bacillus Coli Communis | 60 |
The Comma-Shaped Bacillus of Cholera | 66 |
*Bacillus Typhosus | to face 66 |
*Bacillus Typhosus | to"fac66 |
v*Bacillus Coli Communis | 66 |
*Bacillus Mycoides | 66 |
Pasteur-Chamberland Filter | 80 |
Proteus Vulgaris | 86 |
Bacillus Enteriditis Sporogenes | 86 |
A Plan of Septic Tank and Filter-Beds | 91 |
Filter-Beds | 94 |
Miquel's Flask | 97 |
Sedgwick's Sugar-Tube | 99 |
Sedgwick's Tube | 100 |
Saccharomyces Cerevisiæ | 117 |
Ascospore Formation | 120 |
Gypsum Block | 121 |
Yeast | to face 122 |
Ascospore Formation in Yeast | to"fac122 |
Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria from Rootlet Nodules | to"fac122 |
*Bacillus of Tetanus | to"fac122 |
Saccharomyces Ellipsoideus | 126 |
Saccharomyces Pastorianus | 126 |
Bacillus Acidi Lactici | 131 |
Bacillus Butyricus | 133 |
Kipp's Apparatus | 140 |
Fränkel's Tube | 141 |
Buchner's Tube | 141 |
A Method of Growing Cultivations in a Vacuum over Pyrogallic Solution | 143 |
Micrococcus from Soil | 151 |
Nitrous Organism | to face 158 |
Nitric Organism | to"face158 |
Nitrogen-Fixing Organism from Secretion of Root-Nodules | to"face158 |
Rootlet of Pea with Nodules | 163 |
Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria in Situ in Nodule on Rootlet of a Pea | to face 164 |
Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria in Situ in Rootlet-Nodule of a Pea | to"fac164 |
Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria in Situ in Root-Nodule of a Pea | to"fac164 |
Bacillus of Tetanus | 170 |
Bacillus of Symptomatic Anthrax | 172 |
Bacillus of Malignant Œdema | 172 |
A Centrifuge | 228 |
Suspended Spinal Cord | 255 |
Flask Used in the Preparation of the Toxin of Diphtheria | 262 |
vi*Bacillus Tuberculosis | to face 280 |
*Bacillus Tuberculosis | 280 |
*Streptococcus Pyogenes | 280 |
*Bacillus Anthracis | 280 |
Flask Used in the Preparation of Tuberculin | 282 |
Bacillus of Diphtheria | 289 |
Types of Streptococcus | 298 |
Micrococcus Tetragonus | 299 |
Diplococcus of Neisser | 300 |
Bacillus of Anthrax and Blood Corpuscles | 302 |
Threads of Bacillus Anthracis, Showing Spores | 302 |
Bacillus of Plague | 306 |
*Bacillus of Plague | to face 310 |
*Bacillus of Leprosy | to"fac310 |
Streptothrix Actinomyces | to"fac310 |
Bacillus Mallei | to"fac310 |
Diplococcus of Pneumonia | 312 |
Bacillus of Influenza | 315 |
INTRODUCTION
We live in a world that is teeming with life. From the earliest times of man that life has been studied and the observations recorded. Thus there has slowly come to be a considerable accumulation of knowledge concerning the various forms (morphology) and functions (physiology) of organised life. This we call the science of biology. It has for its object the study of organic beings, and for its end the knowledge of the laws of their organisation and activity. Slowly, too, in the midst of this gradual accumulation of facts, we begin to see incoherence becoming coherent, chaos becoming cosmos, chance and accident becoming law. Further, the contemplation and comprehension which built up the edifice of modern biology is assuming a new relationship to practical life. Biology can no longer be considered only as an academic occupation or as a theoretical pabulum upon which the leisured mind may ruminate. With rapid strides and determined face this giant of knowledge has marched into the arena of practical politics. The world is opening its eyes to a reality which it had mistaken for a vision.
This application of biology to life and its problems has in recent years been nowhere more marked than in the realm of bacteriology. This comparatively new science, associated with the great names of Pasteur, Koch, and Lister, furnishes indeed a stock illustration of the applicability of pure biology. Turn where we will, we shall find the work of the unseen hosts of bacteria daily claiming more and more attention from practical people. Thus biology, even when clothed in the form of microscopic cells, is coming to occupy a new place in the minds of men. "Its evolution," as Professor Patrick Geddes declares, "forms part of the general social evolution." Certainly its recent rapid development forms a remarkable feature in the practical science of our time. Not only in the diagnosis and treatment of disease, nor even in the various applications of preventive medicine, but in ever-increasing degree and sphere, micro-organisms are recognised as agents of utility or otherwise no longer to be ignored. They occur in our drinking water, in our milk supply, in the air we breathe. They ripen cream, and flavour butter. They purify sewage, and remove waste organic products from the land. They are the active agents in a dozen industrial fermentations. They assist in the fixation of free nitrogen, and they build up assimilable compounds. Their activity assumes innumerable phases and occupies many spheres, more frequently proving themselves beneficial than injurious. They are both economic and industrious in the best biological sense of the terms.
Yet bacteriology has its limitations. It is well to recognise this, for the new science has in some measure suffered in the past from over-zealous friends. It cannot achieve everything demanded of it, nor can it furnish a cause for every disease. It is a science fuller of hope than proved and tested knowledge. We are as yet only upon the threshold of the matter. As in the neighbouring realm of chemistry, it is to be feared that bacteriology has not been without its alchemy. The interpretations and conclusions which have been drawn from time to time respecting bacteriological work have led to alarmist views which have not, by later investigation, been fully supported. Again, the science has had devotees who have fondly believed, like the alchemists, that the twin secret of transmuting the baser metals into gold and of indefinitely prolonging human life was at last to be known. But neither the worst fears of the alarmist nor the most sanguine hopes of the alchemist have been verified. Science, fortunately, does not progress at such speed, or with such kindly accommodation. It holds many things in its hands, but not finally life or death. It has not yet brought to light either "the philosopher's stone" or "the vital essence."
What has already been said affords ample reason for a wider dissemination of the elementary facts of bacteriological science. But there are other reasons of a more practical nature. Municipalities are expending public moneys in water analysis, in the examination of milk, in the inspection of cows and dairies, in the bacterial treatment of sewage, and in disinfection and other branches of public health administration. Again, the newly formed National Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, our increasing colonial possessions with their tropical diseases, even medical science itself, which is year by year becoming more preventive, make an increasing claim upon public opinion. The successful accomplishment and solution of these questions depend in a measure upon an educated public opinion respecting the elements of bacteriology. Recently it was urged that "the first elements of bacteriology should be shadowed forth in the primary school."1 This course was advised owing to such knowledge being of value to those engaged in dairying. As we shall point out at a later stage, many of the undesirable changes occurring in milk are due to bacteria, even as the success of the butter and cheese industries depends on the use and control of the fermentative processes due to their action. Much of the uncertainty attending the manufacture of dairy products can only be abolished by the careful application of some knowledge of the flora of milk. In Denmark and in Scandinavia the importance of such knowledge is realised and acted upon. America, too, has not been slow to respond to these needs; but in England comparatively little has been done in this direction.2
Whilst there can be no doubt as to the advantage of a wider dissemination of the ascertained facts concerning bacteria, it should be borne in mind that only patient, skilled observation and experimental research in well-equipped laboratories can advance this branch of science, or indeed train bacteriologists. The lives of Darwin and of Pasteur adequately illustrate this truth. Yet it is observable that States and public bodies are slow to act upon it, and frequently in the past the most useful and substantial support for the advancement of science has been forthcoming only from private sources. As the world learns its intimate relation to science and the interdependence between its life and scientific truth, it may be expected more heartily to support science.
BACTERIA
CHAPTER I
THE BIOLOGY OF BACTERIA3
The first scientist who demonstrated the existence of micro-organisms was Antony von Leeuwenhoek. He was born at Delft, in Holland, in 1632, and enthusiastically pursued microscopy with primitive instruments. He corroborated Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the blood in the web of a frog's foot; he defined the red blood corpuscles of vertebrates, the fibres of the lens of the human eye, the scales of the skin, and the structure of hair. He was neither educated nor trained in science, but in the leisure time of his occupation as a linen-draper he learned the art of grinding lenses, in which he became so proficient that he was able to construct a microscope of greater power than had been previously manufactured. The compound microscope dates from 1590, and when Leeuwenhoek was about forty years old, Holland had already given to the world both microscope and telescope. Robert Hooke did for England what Hans Janssen had done for Holland, and established the same conclusion that Leeuwenhoek arrived at independently, viz., that a simple globule of glass mounted between two metal plates and pierced with a minute aperture to allow rays of light to pass was a contrivance which would magnify more highly than the recognised microscopes of that day. It was with some such instrument as this that the first micro-organisms were observed in a drop of water. It was not until more than a hundred years later that these "animalcules," as they were termed, were thought to be anything more than accidental to any fluid or substance containing them. Plenciz, of Vienna, was one of the first to conceive the idea that decomposition could only take place in the presence of some of these "animalcules." This was in the middle of the eighteenth century. Just about a century later, by a series of important discoveries, it was established beyond dispute that these micro-organisms had an intimate causal relation to fermentation, putrefaction, and infectious diseases. Spallanzani, Pasteur, and Tyndall are the three who more than others contributed to this discovery. Spallanzani was an Italian, who studied at Bologna, and was in 1754 appointed to the chair of logic at Reggio. But his inclinations led him into the realm of natural history. Amongst other things, his attention was directed to the doctrine of spontaneous generation, which had been propounded by Needham a few years previously. In 1768 Spallanzani became Professor of Natural History at Pavia, and whilst there he demonstrated that if infusions of vegetable matter were placed in flasks and hermetically sealed, and then brought to the boiling point, no living organisms could thereafter be detected, nor did the vegetable matter decompose. When, however, the flasks were very slightly cracked, and air gained admittance, then invariably both organisms and decomposition appeared. Schwann, the founder of the cell-theory, and Schulze, both showed that if the air gaining access to the flask were either passed through highly heated tubes or drawn through strong acid the result was the same as if no air entered at all, viz., no organisms and no decomposition. The result of these investigations was that scientific men began to believe that no form of life arose de novo (abiogenesis), but had its source in previous life (biogenesis). It remained to Pasteur and Tyndall to demonstrate this beyond dispute, and to put to rout the fresh arguments for spontaneous generation which Pouchet had advanced as late as 1859. Pasteur collected the floating dust of the air, and found by means of the microscope many organised particles, which he sowed on suitable infusions, and thus obtained rich crops of "animalculæ." He also demonstrated that these organisms existed in different degrees in different atmospheres, few in the pure air of the Mer de Glace, more in the air of the plains, most in the air of towns. He further proved that it was not necessary to insist upon hermetic sealing or cotton filters to keep these living organisms in the air from gaining access to a flask of infusion. If the neck of the flask were drawn out into a long tube and turned downwards, and then a little upwards, even though the end be left open, no contamination gained access. Hence, if the infusion were boiled, no putrefaction would occur. The organisms which fell into the open end of the tube were arrested in the condensation water in the angle of the tube; but even if that were not so, the force of gravity acting upon them prevented them from passing up the long arm of the tube into the neck of the flask. A few years after Pasteur's first work on this subject Tyndall conceived a precise method of determining the absence or presence of dust particles in the air by passing a beam of sunlight through a glass box before and after its walls had been coated with glycerine. Into the floor of the box were fixed the mouths of flasks of infusion. These were boiled, after which they were allowed to cool, and might then be kept for weeks or months without putrefying or revealing the presence of germ life. Here all the conditions of the infusions were natural, except that in the air above them there was no dust.
The sum-total of result arising from all these investigations was to the effect that no spontaneous generation was possible, that the atmosphere contained unseen germs of life, that the smallest of organisms responded to the law of gravitation and adhered to moist surfaces, and that micro-organisms were in some way or other the cause of putrefaction.
The final refutation of the hypothesis of spontaneous generation was followed by an awakened interest in the unseen world of micro-organic life. Investigations into fermentation and putrefaction followed each other rapidly, and in 1863 Davaine claimed that Pollender's bacillus of anthrax, which was found in the blood and body tissues of animals dead of anthrax, was the cause of that disease. From that time to this in every department of biology bacteria have been increasingly found to play an important part. They cause changes in milk, and flavour butter; they decompose animal matter, yet build up the broken-down elements into compounds suitable for use in nature's economy; they assist in the fixation of free nitrogen; they purify sewage; in certain well-established cases they are the cause of specific disease, and in many other cases they are the likely cause. No doubt the disposal of spontaneous generation did much to arouse interest in this branch of science. Yet it must not be forgotten that the advance of the microscope and bacteriological method and technique have played a large share in this development. The sterilisation of culture fluids by heat, the use of aniline dyes as staining agents, the introduction of solid culture media (like gelatine and agar), and Koch's "plate" method have all contributed not a little to the enormous strides of bacteriology. Owing to its relation to disease, physicians have entered keenly into the arena of bacteriological research. Hence, from a variety of causes, it has come about that the advance has been phenomenal.
We shall now take up a number of points in the biology of bacteria which call for early attention, and which are mostly the outcome of comparatively recent work on the subject.
The Place of Bacteria in Nature. As we have seen, for a considerable period of time after their first detection these unicellular organisms were considered to be members of the animal kingdom. As late as 1838, when Ehrenberg and Dujardin drew up their classification, bacteria were placed among the Infusorians. This was in part due to the powers of motion which these observers detected in bacteria. It is now, of course, recognised that animals have no monopoly of motion. But what, after all, are the differences between animals and vegetables so low down in the scale of life? Chiefly two: there is a difference in life-history (in structure and development), and there is a difference in diet. A plant secures its nourishment from much simpler elements than is the case with animals; for example, it obtains its carbon from the carbonic acid gas in air and water. This it is able to do, as regards the carbon, by means of the green colouring matter known as chlorophyll, by the aid of which, with sunlight, carbonic acid is decomposed in the chlorophyll corpuscles, the oxygen passing back into the atmosphere, the carbon being stored in the plant in the form of starch or other organic compound. The supply of carbon in the chlorophyll-free plants, among which are the bacteria, is obtained by breaking up different forms of carbohydrates. Besides albumen and peptone, they use sugar and similar carbohydrates and glycerine as a source of carbon. Many of them also have the capacity of using organic matters of complex constitution by converting such into water, carbonic acid gas, and ammonia. Their hydrogen comes from water, their nitrogen from the soil, chiefly in the form of nitrates. From the soil, too, they obtain other necessary salts. Now all these substances are in an elementary condition, and as such plants can absorb them. Animals, on the other hand, are only able to utilise compound food products which have been, so to speak, prepared for them; for example, albuminoids and proteids. They cannot directly feed upon the elementary substances forming the diet of vegetables. This distinction, however, did not at once clear up the difficult matter of the classification of bacteria. It is true, they possess motion, are free from chlorophyll, and even feed occasionally upon products of decomposition—three physiological characters which would ally them to the animal kingdom. Yet by their structure and capsule of cellulose and by their life-history and mode of growth they unmistakably proclaim themselves to be of the vegetable kingdom. In 1853 Cohn arrived at a conclusion to this effect, and since that date they have become more and more limited in classification and restricted in definition.
Even yet, however, we are far from a scientific classification for bacteria. Nor is this matter for surprise. The development in this branch of biology has been so rapid that it has been impossible to assimilate the facts collected. The facts themselves by their remarkable variety have not aided classification. Names which a few years ago were applied to individual species, like Bacillus subtilis, or Bacterium termo, or Bacillus coli, are now representative, not of individuals, but of families and groups of species. Again, isolated characteristics of certain microbes, such as motility, power of liquefying gelatine, size, colour, and so forth, which at first sight might appear as likely to form a basis for classification, are found to vary not only between similar germs, but in the same germ. Different physical conditions have so powerful an influence upon these microscopic cells that their individual characters are constantly undergoing change. For example, bacteria in old cultures assume a different size, and often a different shape, from younger members of precisely the same species; Bacillus pyocyaneus produces a green to olive colour on gelatine, but a brown colour on potato; the bacillus of Tetanus is virulently pathogenic, and yet may not act thus unless in company with certain other micro-organisms. Hence it will at once appear to the student of bacteriology that, though there is great need for classification amongst the six or seven hundred species of microbes, our present knowledge of their life-history is not yet advanced enough to form more than a provisional arrangement.
We know that bacteria are allied to moulds on the one hand and yeasts on the other, and that they have no differentiation into root, stem, or leaf; we know that they are fungi (having no chlorophyll), in which no sexual reproduction occurs, and that their mode of multiplication is by division. From such facts as these we may build up a classification as follows:—
| Vegetable Kingdom. | |||||||
| │ | |||||||
| ┌─────────────────┬─────────────┬───────────┐ | |||||||
| Thallophyta. [= The lowest forms of vegetable life. No differentiation into root, stem, or leaf.] │ Protophyta. [= No sexual reproduction.] |
Muscineæ | Pteridophyta. | Phanerogamia. | ||||
| │ | |||||||
| ┌──────────┐ | |||||||
| Algæ. [= Chlorophyll present.] |
Fungi. [= No chlorophyll.] │ |
||||||
| ┌─┬─┬─┬─┬─┬─┬─┬─┬─┐ | |||||||
| │ Schizomycetes [= multiplication by cell division or by spores] or Bacteria |
(1) Coccaceæ4—round cells. (2) Bacteriaceæ—rods and threads. |
||||||
| (3) Leptotricheæ. (4) Cladotricheæ. |
Higher Bacteria | ||||||
Structure and Form. Having now located micro-organisms in the economy of nature, we may proceed to describe their subdivisions and form. For practical convenience rather than academic accuracy, we may accept the simple division of the family of bacteria into three chief forms, viz.:—
| Lower Bacteria | (1) Round cell form—coccus. (2) Rod form—bacillus. (3) Thread form—spirillum. |
Higher Bacteria—Leptothrix, Streptothrix, Cladothrix, etc.
A classification dependent as this is upon the form alone is not by any means ideal, for it ignores all the higher and complicated functions of bacteria, but it is, as we have said, practically convenient.