The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story Of Germ Life, by H. W. Conn
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Title: The Story Of Germ Life
Author: H. W. Conn
Release Date: January, 2004 [EBook #4962]
[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
[This file was first posted on April 5, 2002]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF GERM LIFE ***
Produced by Robert Rowe, Charles Franks
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
THE STORY OF GERM LIFE
BY H. W. CONN
PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY AT WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY,
AUTHOR OF EVOLUTION OF TO-DAY,
THE LIVING WORLD, ETC.
PREFACE.
Since the first edition of this book was published the popular
idea of bacteria to which attention was drawn in the original
preface has undergone considerable modification. Experimental
medicine has added constantly to the list of diseases caused by
bacterial organisms, and the general public has been educated to
an adequate conception of the importance of the germ as the chief
agency in the transmission of disease, with corresponding
advantage to the efficiency of personal and public hygiene. At the
same time knowledge of the benign bacteria and the enormous role
they play in the industries and the arts has become much more
widely diffused. Bacteriology is being studied in colleges as one
of the cultural sciences; it is being widely adopted as a subject
of instruction in high schools; and schools of agriculture and
household science turn out each year thousands of graduates
familiar with the functions of bacteria in daily life. Through
these agencies the popular misconception of the nature of micro-
organisms and their relations to man is being gradually displaced
by a general appreciation of their manifold services. It is not
unreasonable to hope that the many thousands of copies of this
little manual which have been circulated and read have contributed
materially to that end. If its popularity is a safe criterion, the
book has amply fulfilled its purpose of placing before the general
reader in a simple and direct style the main facts of
bacteriology. Beginning with a discussion of the nature of
bacteria, it shows their position in the scale of plant and animal
life. The middle chapters describe the functions of bacteria in
the arts, in the dairy, and in agriculture. The final chapters
discuss the relation of bacteria to disease and the methods by
which the new and growing science of preventive medicine combats
and counteracts their dangerous powers.
JULY, 1915.
CONTENTS.
I.--BACTERIA AS PLANTS
Historical.--Form of bacteria.--Multiplication of bacteria.--Spore
formation.--Motion.--Internal structure.--Animals or plants?--
Classification.--Variation.--Where bacteria are found.
II.--MISCELLANEOUS USES OF BACTERIA IN THE ARTS.
Maceration industries.--Linen.--Jute.--Hemp.--Sponges.--Leather.
--Fermentative industries.--Vinegar--Lactic acid.--Butyric acid.--
Bacteria in tobacco curing.--Troublesome fermentations.
III.--BACTERIA IN THE DAIRY.
Sources of bacteria in milk.--Effect of bacteria on milk.--
Bacteria used in butter making.--Bacteria in cheese making.
IV.--BACTERIA IN NATURAL PROCESSES.
Bacteria as scavengers.--Bacteria as agents in Nature's food
cycle.--Relation of bacteria to agriculture.--Sprouting of seeds.
--The silo.--The fertility of the soil.--Bacteria as sources of
trouble to the farmer.--Coal formation.
V.--PARASITIC BACTERIA AND THEIR RELATION TO DISEASE
Method of producing disease.--Pathogenic germs not strictly
parasitic.--Pathogenic germs that are true parasites.--What
diseases are due to bacteria.--Variability of pathogenic powers.--
Susceptibility of the individual.--Recovery from bacteriological
diseases.--Diseases caused by organisms other than bacteria.
VI.--METHODS OF COMBATING PARASITIC BACTERIA
Preventive medicine.--Bacteria in surgery.--Prevention by
inoculation.--Limits of preventive medicine.--Curative medicine.
--Drugs--Vis medicatrix naturae.--Antitoxines and their use.--
Conclusion.
THE STORY OF GERM LIFE.
CHAPTER I.
BACTERIA AS PLANTS.
During the last fifteen years the subject of bacteriology
[Footnote: The term microbe is simply a word which has been coined
to include all of the microscopic plants commonly included under
the terms bacteria and yeasts.] has developed with a marvellous
rapidity. At the beginning of the ninth decade of the century
bacteria were scarcely heard of outside of scientific circles, and
very little was known about them even among scientists. Today they
are almost household words, and everyone who reads is beginning to
recognise that they have important relations to his everyday life.
The organisms called bacteria comprise simply a small class of low
plants, but this small group has proved to be of such vast
importance in its relation to the world in general that its study
has little by little crystallized into a science by itself. It is
a somewhat anomalous fact that a special branch of science,
interesting such a large number of people, should be developed
around a small group of low plants. The importance of bacteriology
is not due to any importance bacteria have as plants or as members
of the vegetable kingdom, but solely to their powers of producing
profound changes in Nature. There is no one family of plants that
begins to compare with them in importance. It is the object of
this work to point out briefly how much both of good and ill we
owe to the life and growth of these microscopic organisms. As we
have learned more and more of them during the last fifty years, it
has become more and more evident that this one little class of
microscopic plants fills a place in Nature's processes which in
some respects balances that filled by the whole of the green
plants. Minute as they are, their importance can hardly be
overrated, for upon their activities is founded the continued life
of the animal and vegetable kingdom. For good and for ill they are
agents of neverceasing and almost unlimited powers.
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