BACTERIA. 39 out of use. Some of the flexile bacilli, whose movements are sinuous, much resembling the swimming of a snake or an eel, were described as vibrio, but this name also has passed into disuse. o The long filaments formed by the division of bacilli without their distinct separation are sometimes called leptothrix, and when these long threads form distinct masses surrounded by a jelly-like material, the name myconostoc is sometimes applied to them. Certain forms much resembling bacilli in their isolated state, characterized by the formation of long filaments with a peculiar grouping which gives the appearance of a false branching, are described as cladothrix; others in which true branchings are seen, as streptothrix. One other bacillus-like form, consisting of long, thick, not distinctly segmented, straight threads, is called beggiatoa. The only important difference between it and leptothrix is that its filaments are thick and coarse, while those of leptothrix are very delicate. Some of the elongate bacteria have a remarkably twisted form and bear some resemblance to a cork- screw. These are called spirilla (Fig. 4). A subdivision FIG. 4.—Diagram illustrating the morphology of the spirilla: a, l>, c, spirilla; d,