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THE PATHOGENIC FLAGELLATES 



So perfectly have trypanosoraes become adapted to mammalian 

 blood and mammalian temperature, that in the majority of species 

 removal from the circulation, even if the blood be kept sterile, results 

 in loss of virulence or activity, and in death. In some cases, e. c/., 

 T. lewisi, different observers have kept infected blood for considerable 

 periods (Francis, eighty-one days), but in the majority of cases the 

 organisms do not remain alive for so long a time (T. brucei or T. 

 rcansi only two to three days). Even when successful such experi- 

 ments involve no multiplication processes, the organisms being merely 

 preserved alive, and with a few exceptions such appears to be the case 



1 Includes T. transvaaliensis, Lav., and T. lingardi, R. Bl. 



