39 
of a single macacus rhesus dying in Breslau where it 
was kept for bone transplanting purposes. 
(6) Pneumonyssus duttoni Newstead & Todd, in 
lungs of eleven monkeys (Cercopithecus schmidti) in 
the upper Congo. 
(c) Pneumonyssus griffithi Newstead, in lungs of 
six monkeys {Macacus rhesus) from India, which were 
killed in England. 
(d) Pneumonyssus simicola Banks, in lungs of a 
monkey (Cyanocephalus sp?) dying in Java after opium 
poisoning. 
2. The lesions they produce simulate and may be 
mistaken grossly for tubercles. 
3. The disease is not a serious one. 
4. Original habitat and mode of transmission are un- 
known. 
Rhesus macaque No. 156 reported in 1914 as cured 
of whipworms and passed back to exhibition, continues 
to show no ova. The worms in this animal f have not been 
nearly so refractory to treatment as in human cases. 
'I* *i* *l* H* 
Coccidium higeminium in Swift Foxes. 
In last yearns report, mention was made (page 41) 
of the infection in two foxes, one of which died. The 
other, which was in isolation, recovered spontaneously, 
all oocysts disappeared from the discharges, and the 
animal has been passed back to exhibition. 
Spiroptera incerta in parrots. 
Twenty-three new arrivals have been examined without 
finding parasitic ova in the dejecta. 
t This animal has lately died and shown no whipworms in the intestine . 
