Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) was isolated from a flour moth collected i
n the German province of Thuringia and described by Berliner in 1915.
The same organism had already been described by Ishiwata in 1902 as Ba
cillus sotto from Japan where it causes a wilt disease of silkworm cat
erpillars, but the description was not known to Berliner. Bt is now th
e accepted name for a range of aerobic spore-forming bacteria which fo
rm an insect toxic crystal during sporulation. However, many bacteriol
ogists consider Bt to be a variant of Bacillus cereus, a ubiquitous so
il-inhabiting bacterium. Since the pioneering work of Steinhaus in Cal
ifornia in the early 1950s, there has been considerable commercial int
erest and products are now sold in most countries of the world for con
trol of caterpillars (var. kurstaki, entomocidus, galleriae and aizawa
i), mosquito and blackfly larvae (var. israelensis) and beetle larvae
(var. tenebrionis and san diego).