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  1. Feb 10, 2016 · Additional refinement of the name streptococcus came from Friedrich Julius Rosenbach in 1884, who examined bacteria isolated from suppurative lesions, and the species was named Streptococcus pyogenes (Gr., pyo, pus, and genes, forming) (Evans, 1936).

  2. Then, in 1884, German scientist Friedrich Julius Rosenbach identified Staphylococcus aureus, discriminating and separating it from Staphylococcus albus, a related bacterium. In the early 1930s, doctors began to use a more streamlined test to detect the presence of an S. aureus infection by the means of coagulase testing, which enables detection ...

  3. Anton Julius Friedrich Rosenbach (1842–1923), German bacteriologist. Taxon names authored (List may be incomplete) ... Wikipedia; In Wikipedia.

  4. Staphylococcus aureus. Rosenbach 1985. Staphylococcus aureus ( also S. aureus, from the Greek σταφυλόκοκκος, “grape-cluster berry”, Latin aureus, “golden”) is a gram-positive, round shaped bacterium appearing in grape-like clusters, often living on the skin or in the nose of a person, [1] as well as in the lower ...

  5. What links here; Related changes; Upload file; Special pages; Permanent link; Page information

  6. F. Ferdinand Falkson. Anna Fischer-Dückelmann. Gustav Fischer (explorer) Joseph Frank (physician) Albert Fraenkel (1848–1916) Wolfgang Bernhard Fränkel. Alexander von Frantzius. Carl Friedländer.

  7. Julius Wilhelm Albert Wigand, known as Albert Wigand (April 21, 1821 – October 22, 1886), was a German botanist, pharmacologist and pharmacognostician. His is most well known for being the director of the Alter Botanischer Garten Marburg from 1861 to 1886, and for his opposition to Charles Darwin and the theory of Evolution on religious grounds.

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