42 Prot 
XVIII. PROTOZOA. 
Artificial cultivation of Trypanosoma lewisi> McNeal & Novy (255). — 
Transmission of the Trypanosome of sleeping-sickness by Olossina palpalis> 
Bruce & Nabarro (38 & 39).— LigniSres (227) & Elmassian & Miqone 
(98) were unable to transmit the Trypanosome of Mai de Caderas by means 
of Stomoxys calcitrans , and do not think this insect is the natural con- 
veyer ; Sivori & Lecler (357), on the other hand, think that it is; they 
all agree that the capybara is the original “source” of the parasite. — 
Apparently Hippobosca rufipes and H. maculata , are the usual transmit- 
ters of Trypanosoma theilen , Laveran (200). 
2. Technique. 
Description of a suction-tube for removing Rhizopods and Infusoria 
from the slime etc. at the Surface of stagnant ponds, Zacharias (415). 
Different methods of capturing Plankton ; filtering apparatus, etc. 
Lohmann (234). 
Effects of Romanowsky’s stain on Protozoa, Feinberg (108 & 109).- — 
Modification of Romanowsky’s stain, Harris (145). 
Technique for Haematozoa, particularly for malarial parasites, le Dantec 
(81), also Laveran (198). — Method of staining the blood for malarial 
parasites, Gillot (124), & Koreck (185). — Method of staining Spirilla and 
Trypanosomes ip the blood, Levaditi (216). — Means of distinguishing 
between true endoglobular Haematozoa and para-nuclear grains etc., 
Laveran (199). 
3. Bibliography, etc, 
Bibliography of Protozoan papers for 1902, with abstracts of several, 
ayer (253). — List of Certes’ Protozoan works, Guiart (140). 
Bibliography of works on plankton (inch Protozoa), Lemmermann (215). 
Bibliography of Foraminifera from 1888-1898, Toutkowski (382). — 
On a note of Costa’s (publ. 1855) concerning Rosalina a.malice ( = Rotaliq 
peccarii ), Fornasini (118). 
Bibliography of the Coccidia for the last four years, Luhe (240). 
On the nomenclature of the different forms and varieties of malaria and 
its parasites, Brucp (37), Williamson (407).— Collection of papers relating 
to the history of the discovery of the transmission of malaria, Grassi (133). — 
According to Blanchard (20), Klencke was the first to see a malarial 
parasite (“quartan” form). This observer noted flagelliform bodies 
(probably microgametes) in his own blood in 1843. 
Babes (11) points out that he himself was ithe first to discover 
Riroplasma. 
Bibliography of Trypanosome literature, 1900-1903, Rabinowitsch 
& Kempner (311). — History of the discovery of Trypanosomes in man, 
Boyce, Ross & Sherrington (33). 
III. DISTRIBUTION. 
A. Geographical. 
Europe : — River Trent, Protozoa from, Matthews & Oswell (251). 
Clyde area, deep-sea Rhizopods from, with n. spp., Pearcey (286). 
The Hebrides, various Rhizopods, many of them n. spp., West (405). 
Marine Foraminifera from Norwegian Fiords, Ki^er (178). 
Gymnomyxa from Spitzbergen, with n. spp., Penard (288). 
Neighbourhood of Esbo-Lofo (near Helsingfors), fresh-water and marine 
Rhizopods, Heliozoa, Mastigophora, and Ciliophora, Levander (221); 
fresh-water ponds, islands oft' the Finnish coast, Rhizopods (including 
Difflugia curvicaulis), Heliozoa, and Mastigophora, Levander (222). 
