33 Prot. 
II. Protozoa. 
[1915] 
Lentospora dermatobia n. sp. in the 
skin of the Japanese eel (Japanese) ; 
Ishii S. Dobuts Z. Tokyo 27 pp. 471- 
474. 
Myxobolus loyamai sp. n. from gills 
of the Japanese carp ; Kudo Dobuts. 
Z. Tokyo 27 1915 pp. 517-523. 
Nosema ajris described and discussed ; 
Imms J. Roy. Agricultural Soc. 75 pp. 
62-70. 
Thelohania corethrae sp. n., from 
larvae of Corethra ( Savomyia ) plumi- 
cornis ; Schuberg & Rodriguez Berlin 
Arb. Kais. Gesundheitsamt. 50 p. 122. 
(e) Actinomyxidia. 
[Nothing.] 
(f) Sarcosporidia. 
Sarcosporidia, structure and S3'ste- 
matic position discussed ; Moroff 
Arch. Protistenkunde Jena 35 pp. 256- 
315. 
Sarcosporidia found in Mammalia 
and Aves in Panama ; Darling J. 
Parasitol. Urbana 111. 1 pp. 113-120. 
Sarcocystis leporum from Rabbit p. 
214, setophagae from Redstart p. 217, 
spp. n. United States ; Crawley Phila- 
delphia Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. 66. — S. 
muris, schizogony described ; Erd- 
mann Proc. Soc. Exp. Biol. Med. 11 p, 
152. 
(g) Haplosporidia. 
Rhinosporidium equi sp. n., from the 
nose of a horse, S. Africa ; Zschokke 
Schweiz. -Arch. Tierheilk. 55 p. 641. — 
R. kinealyi, 15 cases from man, affecting 
various parts of the body, Madras ; 
Tirumurti Practitioner 93 pp. 704- 
719. 
SPOROZOA INCERTAE SEDIS. 
[Various and uncertain.] 
Anaplasma marginale, Culture in 
vitro ; Veglia Giom. R. Acad. Med. 
di Torino 78 pp. 33-39. 
Bartonella nom. n. to replace Bar- 
tonia [below] preoccupied, Strong, 
Tyzzer, Sellards, Brues & Gastia- 
buru, Rep. first Harvard Exp. S. 
America, 1915, p. 32. — B. bacilliformis, 
stages in life-cycle identified ; Town- 
send Washington D.C. J. Acad. Sci. 
1915 pp. 662-667. 
Bartonia gen. n. bacilliformis sp. n. 
Peru, parasite of red blood cells, cause 
of Oroya fever, S. America ; Strong, 
Tyzzer, Brues & Sellards J. Amer. 
Med. Ass. Chicago 61 p. 1715. 
Orahamella gen. n. for Q. muris sp. n., 
name proposed for the “ Graham- 
Smith ” bodies from the red blood- 
corpuscles of Mus decumanus from 
Brazil ; Carini Bull. Soc. Path Exot. 
8 pp. 103-104. 
“ Kurloff -bodies ” from Cavia cobay a, 
their characters and significance ; Flu 
Mededeel. Burgerl. Geneesk. Dienst. 
Ned. -Indie 1914 Hft. 3 pp. 19-40; 
Nature of the “ Kurloff bodies ” ; 
Sangiorgi Pathologica 7 p. 263. 
Paraplasma flavigenum considered 
the cause of yellow fever ; Seidelin 
J. Trop. Med. Hygiene 18 pp. 38-40. — 
P. /., transmission experiments ; Sei- 
delin Yellow Fever Bureau Bull. 3 
pp. 203-208. — P. /., capable of trans- 
mission by artificial infection ; Sei- 
delin & Connal Yellow Fever Bureau 
Bull. Supplement 2 pp. 427-478.— P. f. 
not the parasite of yellow fever ; 
Wen yon & Low J. Trop. Med. Hygiene 
18 p. 55. — “Seidelin bodies” ( = 
Paraplasma flavigenum) found in blood 
of normal guinea-pigs ; Thomson Yel- 
low Fever Bureau Bull. Supplement 2 
pp. 479-482. P. /. not an organism, 
and not connected with yellow fever, 
Fowler, Simpson, Ross, Leishman 
& Balfour, Yellow Fever Commission 
(West Africa). Third Report. 
Telosporidium [apparently gen. n.. 
for unidentifiable telosporidian spores] 
and typographi sp. n., from Ips typo- 
graphies ; Fuchs Zool. Jahrb. Jena 
Abth, Syst. 38 p. 163. 
Toxoplasma ratti sp. n., from lung- 
smears of Mus ratlus albinus ; San- 
giorgi Torino Giom. Acc. Med. 77 
p. 83. — T. gondii, structure, life- 
history and artificial infection of various 
Muridae ; Laveiian Paris Bui. Soc. 
path. exot. 8 p. 58. — T. spp., rede- 
scribed ; Migliano Os toxoplasmas, 
Rio de Janeiro. 
4. MASTIGOPHORA. 
(a) Flagellata. 
Astasia levis sp. n., from Danube ; 
Belar Arch. Protistenkunde Jena 36 
p. 21. 
