30 Prot. 
II. Protozoa. 
[19111 
(e) Sarcosporidiosis. 
Toxic substances present in the 
Sarcosporidian cysts of the horse ; 
Sabrazds & Muratet, 398. 
Sarcocystis tenella of the sheep 
produces a true toxin; Teichmann & 
Braun, 472. 
(f) Iiaplosporidiosis. 
Haplosporidium potamillae asso- 
ciated with yeasts, as a cause of disease 
in Potamilla torelli ; Mesnil, F. & 
Caullery, 319. 
(g) Trypanosomosia. 
On the ability to obtain a strain of 
Trypanosoma lewisi virulent not only 
to rats but to other Rodents (incl. 
mice, rabbits, guinea-pigs); Roudsky, 
395. 
A trypanotoxin produced by T. 
brucii ; Laveran & Pettit, 275. 
Relation of the different phases of 
Trypanosoma ( Schizotrypanum ) cruzi 
to the human organs; Chagas, 90; 
also Vianna, 479. 
Eine klinisch und atiologisch der 
Trypanosomiasis und Schlafkrankheit 
verwandte Krankheit bei Javanen auf 
Sumatra ; Elders, 145. — Doubts cast 
upon the occurrence of human trypano- 
somosis and leishmaniosis, etc., in 
Sumatra Schiiffner, 419. 
Murrina of Equines, and T.hippicum ; 
Darling, 122. 
Trypanosomen bei gesunden Rin- 
dern ; Vrijburg, 482 ; also Wester, 
496. — Trypanosoma theileri in Rin- 
dern des Don-Gebietes (Russ.) ; Stolini- 
koff, 454. 
(h) Leishmaniosis, etc. 
Die Aetiologie der in Surinam 
vorkommenden sogenannten ,,Bosch- 
yaws“, einer der Aleppobeule analogen 
Erkrankung; Flu, 172. 
Presence of the Leis&marwa-parasites 
in the cerebro-spinal fluid of a child 
suffering from Kala-Azar; La Cava, 
261. 
Oriental Sore in Bagdad and Leish- 
mania tropica ; Wenyon, 493. 
(j) Various and uncertain. 
The disease called “ blackhead ” in 
turkeys perhaps due, at any rate in 
part, to the coecal Flagellates (Tricho- 
monads, etc.) occurring ; Hadley & 
Amison, 208. 
Un Flagelle (cf. Monas pyophila 
Grimm), associe avec une Eruption 
vulvo-vaginale pustulo-ulcereuse, chez 
une bufflesse; Pcenaru, 371. 
Small corpuscles, both intra- and 
extraglobular, in the blood and organs 
of yellow-fever patients, regarded as 
Protozoan parasites, perhaps tho causa- 
tive agent ; Seidelin, 423. — Tnis minute 
Protozoan blood parasite termed Para- 
plasma flavigenum n. g. n. sp. ; 
Seidelin, 424. 
Negri bodies (“ Neuroryctes hydro- 
phobiae”) regarded as not really 
parasites at all, but of the nature of 
nucleolar extrusions ; Acton & Harvey, 
1. 
The cancer-cell regarded as an 
independent unicellular organism 
(“ Unicellula cancri ”), allied to the 
Protozoa ; Butlin, 65. 
Miscellaneous. 
Transmission ; natural infection. 
On the exact mode of transmission 
of T. lewisi to the rat by the rat-flea 
(Oeratophyllus fasciatus ); Minchin & 
Thomson, 328 ; also Strickland, 456. 
Transmission of the Trypanosomes 
of the leech, goldfish, bream and 
perch, and also of tho Trypan oplasm 
of the goldfish, by Hemiclepsis mar- 
ginata ; Robertson, 387. 
Infectivity of certain forms of 
Trypanosoma gambiense in the alimen- 
tary canal of Ql. palpalis after a period 
of at least 24 days since the fly fed ; 
Bruce, Hamerton, Bateman & Mackie, 
60. 
Transmission of T. gambiense by 
Gl. morsitans ; Taute, 468. — of T. 
brucii by Gl. palpalis ; Fischer, 169. 
No hereditary infection of Gl. 
palpalis with T. gambiense ; Kleine & 
Taute, 246. 
Passage of Trypanosoma gambiense 
through mucous membranes and (un- 
injured) skin, producing infection ; 
Hindle, 226. 
