In 1906, G.F. White first described the bacterium that caused American foulbrood (AFB), and named it
Bacillus larvae. In 1950, a bacterium isolated from bee larvae and associated with the rare disease "powdery scale" was named
Bacillus pulvifaciens by Katznelson. In 1993, both
B. larvae and
B. pulvifaciens were transferred to a new genus,
Paenibacillus. The two species were combined into a single species:
Paenibacillus larvae in 1996, remaining differentiated as two subspecies:
P. larvae ssp.
larvae (formerly
Bacillus larvae) and
P. larvae ssp.
pulvifaciens (formerly
Bacillus pulvifaciens). In 2006, the subspecies were eliminated based on spore morphology, biochemical profile and DNA testing, and when it was also demonstrated that experimental infection of honeybee larvae with the
pulvifaciens subspecies caused American foulbrood signs without causing "powdery scale". There are at least four
genotypes of
P. larvae, named after their enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus (ERIC) sequences. Genotype ERIC I corresponds to the former species of
Bacillus larvae, and genotypes ERIC II, III and IV correspond to the former species of
B. pulvifaciens. ==Epidemiology==