153 zooLoar. 



found in man, tlie former in a Lascar, the latter in an 

 Egyptian boy. 



Bilharzia hmmatohia Oobbold is common in the portal 

 system of blood-vessels and in the veins of the mesentery, 

 bladder, etc., of Egyptians, and has caused an endemic dis- 

 ease at the Cape of Good Hope. In Egypt, out of three 

 hundred and sixty-three post-mortem examinations, this 

 worm occurred one hundred and seventeen times. . It is 

 bisexual, the female greatly smaller than the male, living in 

 a canal or passage in the male formed by the infolding of 

 the edges of the concave side of the body, called a gynmco- 

 pJiore. There are three other rare human flukes known : 

 Tetrastoma renale Delle Chiaje, Hexathyridium pinguicola 

 Treutler, and H. venarum Treutler, the latter occurring in 

 the veins (Cobbold). 



The nurse of Distomum macrostomum Rudolphi (Fig. 

 102), described under the name of Leucochloridiuin, is 

 cylindrical, and strongly resembles a maggot ; its strange 

 habitat is the tentacles of a snail [Succinea). 



Of the second suborder, Polystomem, the species have two 

 small anterior and one or several posterior suckers, and a 



J pair of eyes. They are 

 mostly external parasites, 

 like the leeches, and un- 

 dergo no metamorphosis. 

 In some forms the body 

 \_J is segmented. 



% A type of this suborder 



is Asindogaster concM- 



!Fig. 103. — 1. LaucocJiloridium paradoxum. ? -n i • i ■ i i -j 



living in tlie tentacles ofSuceinea; 2. A full- COla xSaer, WJllCn inhabits 



grown nurBe-Leucochlorldinm with the nurse- ,-i ■ -,■ ■, •, „ 



stock from which it has grown. Natural size, ttie pericardial CaVlty 01 



— After Zeller. j; t_ j. in 



fresh- water mussels, and 

 also is an ectoparasite of fresh-water fishes. Diplozoo7i 

 consists of two Trematodes very intimately united into an 

 X -formed double animal. In the young stages the two ani- 

 mals are separate, and in this state were described under the 

 name of Diporpa. Diplozoon piaradoxum Nordmann lives on 

 the gills of numerous fresh-water fishes. Polystoinum has 

 a flat body, without suckers on the fore end, with six suck- 



