His genus " Coccus ", containing the scale insects, he placed among the 4-winged Hemiptera, along with aphids and other plant-attacking insects, even though females have no wings, and males have two wings.
32.
Around the end of the 16th century the Old World " Porphyrophora " dyes were supplanted by dyes of the " Dactylopius coccus " cochineal species from the Americas, which could be harvested several times per year and yielded a much more concentrated dye.
33.
[C4 ] COCCUS : Self-Configured Cost-Based Query Services in the Cloud ( June 22 27, 2013 ), I . Konstantinou, D . Tsoumakos, and N . Koziris ( ATHENA ), 2013 ACM SIGMOD / PODS International Conference on Management of Data
34.
Trophozoites of " Acanthamoeba " hosting these strains were isolated from asymptomatic women in Germany and also in an outbreak of humidifier fever ( Hall s coccus ) in Vermont USA . Four patients from Nova Scotia whose sera recognized Hall s coccus did not show serological cross-reaction with antigens from the Chlamydiaceae.
35.
Assignment of a strain to the genus " Staphylococcus " requires it to be a Gram-positive coccus that forms clusters, produces catalase, has an appropriate cell wall structure ( including peptidoglycan type and teichoic acid presence ) and G + C content of DNA in a range of 30 40 mol %.
36.
Strawberry tongue ( seen in certain bacterial infections ) is a sign, since it is a term which refers primarily to a diagnostic appearance, while Coccus ( a round bacterium ) is not, even though identification of cocci under the microscope is diagnostically useful, because the term refers primarily to a physical entity not to an appearance or observation per se.
37.
"Stomatococcus mucilaginous " is a Gram-positive, coagulase-negative, encapsulated, non-spore-forming and non-motile coccus, present in clusters, tetrads or pairs . " S . mucilaginous " can easily be confused for the bacteria from the genera " Micrococcus " and " Staphylococcus ".
38.
Other species in the genus " Dactylopius " can be used to produce cochineal extract, but they are extremely difficult to distinguish from " D . coccus ", even for expert taxonomists, and the latter scientific name ( and the vernacular " cochineal insect " ) is therefore commonly used when one is actually referring to other biological species.
39.
Bacteria which are the etiological cause for a disease are often referred to by the disease name followed by a describing noun ( bacterium, bacillus, coccus, agent or the name of their phylum ) e . g . cholera bacterium ( " Vibrio cholerae " ) or Lyme disease spirochete ( " Borrelia burgdorferi " ), note also rickettsialpox ( " Rickettsia akari " ) ( for more see ).
40.
In the Book of Exodus, God instructs Moses to have the Israelites bring him an offering including cloth " of blue, and purple, and scarlet . " The term used for scarlet in the 4th century Latin Vulgate version of the Bible passage is " coccumque bis tinctum ", meaning " colored twice with coccus . " " Coccus ", from the ancient Greek " Kokkos ", means a tiny grain and is the term that was used in ancient times for the Kermes vermilio insect used to make the Kermes dye.