30 Prot. 
H. Protozoa. 
[1912J 
Saint-Louis du Senegal ; Bourret, 64. — 
]Qn oas de toxoplasmose canine en Alle- 
piagne ; Yakimoff A Kohl-Yakimoff, 531. 
“ Lymphangitis epizootica ” (“ Leuco- 
eytozoon ” piroplasmoides ) and histo- 
plasmosis ( Histoplasma capsid a turn) 
regarded as not Protozoan at all, but 
Rlastomycetic ; da Rocha-Lima, 398. 
Associated with fever in Man (Yucatan) 
intracorpuscular elements regarded as 
’ perhaps a different form of the alleged 
yellow fever parasite, and termed Para- 
plasma subflavigenum n. sp. ; Seidelin, 
438. 
Ober einen mutmasslich neuen Blut- 
parasiten des Menschen ; Kopanaris, 
250. 
Cancer considered to bo caused by a 
Chlamydozoan, “ Chlamydozoon perni- 
dosum" ; Alexeieff, 5. — Infusori ciliati 
e cancro ; Barabaschi, 31. 
Miscellaneous. 
Transmission ; natural infection. 
■ Transmission of Uepatozoon criceti, 
by a mite ( Lelaps ?) ; probable non- 
transmission of Trypanosoma criceti by 
this agent, but probably by a flea 
( Typhlopsylla assimilis ; Noller, 344. 
Observations concerning the trans- 
mission of East Coast fever ( Theileria 
parva ) by ticks ; Theiler, 474. 
Methods of infection of fish (esp. 
Gadus xircns) with Myxosporidia ; 
criticism of Erdmann’s remarks (Zool. 
Rec. 1911 Protozoa 151); Auerbach, 
20 . 
Modes of transmission of Nosema 
apis to bees ; Fantham A Porter, 163. 
Hereditary transmission of “ Crithidia ” 
melophagi (in the keds) as maintained 
by Swingle and Porter, regarded us 
extremely doubtful or non-existent ; 
Caucliemez, 85 ; also Chatton A Delanoe, 
97. 
Possibility of Anopheles maculipennis 
transmitting Leishmania of Mediter- 
ranean Ivala-Azar ; Franchini, 183. — 
Leishmania et punaises ; Franchini, 
185. 
Transmission de Leishmania de chien 
&chien par piqure de Pulex serraticeps ; 
Sergent, Lhdritier, Lemaire, 444. 
On the transmission of Cambay boil 
(L. tropica ); Patton (360) considers 
neither house-flies (Masco), dog-fleas 
(Ctenocephalus canis ) nor mosquitoes 
act as transmitting agents, but thinks 
that bugs (Cimex rotundatus ) do so. 
“ Leishmaniosis infantum,” IJeber- 
tragung (Russ.) ; Yakimoff & Kohl- 
Yakimoff, 536. 
Try panosom ides et membrane peritro- 
phique chez les Drosophiles. Culture 
et evolution ; Chatton A L6ger, 101. — 
Du determinisms des infections endo- 
trophiques ou peritrophiques des 
Drosophiles par leurs Try panosom ides. 
Infections larvaires et imaginules ; 
Chatton A L6ger, 103. 
Modes of infection of a Muscid 
(Pycnosoma putorium ) with various 
Flagellates (Leptomonas soudanensis, 
Cercoplasma mirabilis ) ; Roubaud, 408. 
Transmission naturelle de la Souma 
(T. cazalboui) par Glossina tachinoides 
et morsitans ; de la Baleri (T. peecmdi) 
par Gl. morsitans au Soudan nig^rien ; 
Bouet A Roubaud, 59. 
Transmission of T. cazalboui and 
congolense by Gl. morsitans ; Rodhain, 
Pons, Van den Branden, A Bequaert, 
400. 
Experiences de transmission des 
trypanosomiases animales de l’Afrique 
occidentals fran^aise (T. cazalboui, 
pecaudi, dimorphon, soudanense, evans’i) 
par les Stomoxes; Bouet A Roubaud, 
Trypanosomiases (T. dimorphon, con- 
golense) et Glossines (Gl. palpalis et 
morsitans ) de la Haute Gambie et de la 
Casamance : Experiences de trans- 
mission ; Bouet A Roubaud, 60. 
On the probability of direct trans- 
mission of T. cazalboui in Fr. W. Africa, 
by means of Stomoxys ; Bouffard, 63. 
Transmission of T. nanum Lav. by 
Olossina palpalis', Duke, 139.— Gl. pal- 
palis the probable “carrier” of T. 
uniforme ; Fraser A Duke, 189. 
Transmission of T. brucii by Gl. 
palpalis; Fischer, 171. 
T. simiae n. sp., convej^ed by Glossina 
morsitans ; Bruce, Harvey, Hamerton 
A Davey, 73. 
