172 ILLINOIS BIOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS [382 



similar to Tenehrio molitor. It is quite possible that the parasite is not 

 identical with or a variety of the classic G. cuneata, for the fi^re does not 

 exactly Coincide with the others, but no data whatever accompanies the 

 figures and it seems best to leave the species in the present position. 



GREGARINA POLYMORPHA (Hammerschmidt) Stein 

 [Figures 140, 141, 142, 153] 



Gregarina: Sporonts biassociative, elongate, cylindrical, maximum 

 length 350/1,, maximum width 100/i,. Ratio length protomerite : total 

 length : : 1 : 5 to 1 : 7 ; width protomerite : width deutomerite : : 1 

 : 1.8 to 1 : 2. Protomerite dome shaped, as wide as high, no constric- 

 tion at septum. Deutomerite elongate cylindrical, rounded at posterior 

 extremity. Nucleus small, spherical, one karyosome. 



Cyst and spores unknown. 



Taken at Berlin, Germany, and Roscoff and Grenoble, France. Host : 

 Tenehrio molitor L. larva and adult. Habitat : Intestine. 



Hammerschmidt knew two of the forms of gregarines parasitic in 

 the larvae of Tenehrio molitor. He called them, however, by one name. 

 In the words of Stein, 



"Hammerschmidt kannte wahrscheinlich bereits zwei dieser Formen, ; 



er hielt sie aber fiir eine Art und nannte sie Clepsidrina polymorpha." 



Stein differentiated the two species, calling one G. cuneata, my fig- 

 ure 133, the other G. polymorpha, my figure 142. 



Frantzius gave, side by side, figures of Stein's G. cuneata and G. 

 polymorpha, and called them both G. polymorpha. (PI. VII, group V, 

 Figs. 1 and 2 ; my figures 135 and 140) . 



Lankester mentioned G. polymorpha and under this name gave as 

 synonyms Stylorhynchus ovalis Stein and G. cuneata Stein. 



Schneider brought together again in coincidence with Hammer- 



