38 Prot. 
XVIII. PROTOZOA. 
A case of pernicious malaria with descents but no intra-corpuscular 
forms, Grassi (130). 
Piroplasmosis : — Gotschlich (129), Hutcheon (161), Koch (182), 
LigniSres (226), and of horses in Madagascar, Thiroux (379). 
Splenomegaly and Dum-Dum fever in India, Leishman-Donovan bodies 
in, Donovan (86), Ross (322 & 323) ; Piroplasma donovani , the cause of 
Dum-Dum fever in Man, Laveran & Mesnil (203). 
The virulence of bacilliform piroplasmosis, Laveran (193). — Bacillary 
form of Piroplasma in Rhodesian Red-water; immunization experiments 
against bovine piroplasmosis, LigniIjres (226). 
Piroplasma bigeminum or Trypanosoma theileri, associated with spirillosis 
of cattle in the Transvaal, Laveran (194). 
Trypanosomosis: — Sleeping-sickness: Baker (13), Boigey (24), 
Broden (35), Bruce & Nabarro (38 & 39), Castellani (50-55), Dutton 
& Todd (94 & 95), Kruse (187), M anson (245), Manson & Daniels (247), 
Maxwell-Adams (252), Sambon (329), Zeltner (426). — Laveran & 
Mesnil (203a) summarize the recent work on sleeping-sickness, and add 
to their comparative account (Zool. Rec. 1902, No. 207) of known trypano- 
somoses. 
Nagana or Surra : Broden (36), Musgrave & Clegg (277), Musgrave 
& Williamson (278), Schilling (336). 
Dourine in Algeria, Rennes (317), Rouget (325), & Szewczyk (375). 
Mai de Caderas (S. America) : Elmassian & Migone (98), Ligni^res 
(227), Sivori & Lecler (357). 
Infection of monkey ( Macacus cynomolgus) with the Trypanosome of 
sleeping sickness, and its behaviour, Brumpt (40).— Susceptibility of hi- 
bernating marmots to Trypanosoma brucei ; fatal effects of the parasites, 
Blanchard (21). 
Tse-tso flies, and sleeping-sickness and other trypanosomoses, Brumpt 
(41 & 42). 
Action of human serum on the Trypanosomes of Nagana, Surra and 
Mai de Caderas, Laveran (195). 
Nagana, Surra, and Mai de Caderas are quite distinct diseases, each 
produced by a different Trypanosome ; immunization experiments, Laveran 
& Mesnil (202). — Non-identity of Nagana and Surra confirmed, Vall^e & 
Carr6 (392). 
Dum-Dum fever in India, perhaps a trypanosomosis, Leishman (213). 
Agglomeration forms of : T. castellanii Kruse \—T. gambiense], Brumpt 
& Wurtz (43); T. brucei (the Nagana parasite), Martini (250); T. equinum , 
Elmassian & Migone (98), LigniIjres (227), and Sivori & Lecler (357). 
Carp, especially in captivity, strongly infected with Trypanoplasma 
cypriniy suffer from anaemia and loss of red blood corpuscles, Plehn (298). 
Myxosporidiosis : — The “ Drehkrankheit ” of trout, Hofer (156). 
The Myxosporidian parasite ( Nosema stegomyce = Myxococcidium s.) 
infecting Stegomyia fasciata , the transmitter of yellow fever, bears no 
relation whatever to this disease ; formation of degenerate, “ brown M 
spores (cf. malaria) probably owing to the action of tissue-secretions, 
Marchoux, Salimbeni & Simond (248). 
Gurleya legen n. sp. causes complete degeneration of the fat-bodies, 
connect! ve-tissuo and even muscles in the larvas of Ephemerella , Hesse 
(153). 
Sarcosporidiosis : — Fatal effects on rabbits of a “Sarcosporidian- 
extract,” owing to the presence of a poisonous enzyme, Rievel & Behrens 
(319). 
Protozoa and other diseases: — Amoebic-dysentery, Gross (138), 
Zorn (429). 
Relation of the pathogenic Amoeba of dysentery {Entamoeba histolytica) 
to the mucous-membrane, etc. of the gut-wall, Schaudinn (333). 
