Info logo
Encyclopedia

  

Bacillus anthracis

Home :: Up
Google
www.fastload.org

Bacillus anthracis

Bacillus anthracis is a rod-shaped Gram-positive bacterium of size about 1 by 6 microns, and is the cause of the disease known as anthrax. B. anthracis was the first bacterium ever to be shown to cause disease, by Robert Koch in 1877. The name anthracis originates from the Greek word anthrax meaning coal, and is used because victims develop black skin lesions. The bacteria normally rest in spore form in the soil, and can survive for decades in this state. Once taken in by a herbivore, the bacteria start multiplying inside the animal and eventually kill it, then continue to reproduce in the carcass. Once they run out of nutrients there, they revert back to the dormant spore state.

See also: Bacillus


Find your way back!

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license.
To view or edit this article at Wikipedia, follow this link.