﻿NOTES 
  ON 
  SPOKOZOA, 
  

  

  155 
  

  

  may 
  attain 
  a 
  diameter 
  of 
  as 
  much 
  as 
  40 
  f.i. 
  In 
  tLe 
  one 
  before 
  

   us 
  the 
  nucleus 
  has 
  already 
  divided 
  up 
  into 
  several, 
  each 
  

   possessing 
  one 
  tofourkaryosomes 
  (k.), 
  with 
  usually 
  a 
  

   certain 
  amount 
  of 
  granular 
  chromatin 
  besides. 
  Around 
  each 
  

   of 
  these 
  daughter-nuclei 
  the 
  cytoplasm 
  segregates 
  itself, 
  and 
  

   thus 
  the 
  parasite 
  becomes 
  (superficially) 
  divided 
  up 
  into 
  a 
  

  

  number 
  of 
  uninuclear 
  portions 
  (Fig. 
  3). 
  These 
  buds 
  next 
  com- 
  

   mence 
  to 
  grow 
  out 
  at 
  the 
  periphery 
  (Fig. 
  4), 
  forming 
  daughter- 
  

   schizonts,or, 
  as 
  Siedlecki 
  terms 
  them, 
  " 
  schizontocytes" 
  (sz.c.) 
  

   [daughter-sporoblasts]. 
  The 
  host-cell 
  is 
  by 
  this 
  time 
  greatly 
  

   hypertrophied, 
  and 
  consists 
  for 
  the 
  most 
  part 
  of 
  a 
  very 
  

   delicate, 
  attenuated 
  layer 
  of 
  protoplasm, 
  enclosing 
  the 
  huge 
  

   vacuole 
  in 
  which 
  the 
  Klossiella 
  lies; 
  on 
  one 
  side 
  (at 
  h. 
  c.) 
  

   it 
  is 
  rather 
  thicker, 
  and 
  this 
  portion 
  contains 
  the 
  nucleus, 
  

   also 
  much 
  altered 
  and 
  hyperchromatosed. 
  The 
  schizontocytes 
  

  

  