Genus. Eimeria, Aimé Schneider, 1875.

Syn.: Psorospermium, Rivolta, 1878; Cytospermium, Rivolta, 1878; Coccidium, R. Leuckart, 1879; Pfeifferia, Labbé, 1894; Pfeifferella, Labbé, 1899.

The Eimeria belong to Léger’s old family, the Tetrasporocystidæ, which comprises forms producing oöcysts with four sporocysts, each containing two sporozoites. The cysts are spherical or oval, as are also usually the schizonts. The members of the genus are confined chiefly to vertebrate hosts, the more important economically occurring in mammals and birds. From the mammalian hosts very rarely the parasites may reach man. Eimeria (Coccidium) avium of wild birds and poultry, and Eimeria stiedæ parasitic in rabbits, may be considered. There is a general similarity in their life-cycles and each is of great practical importance.

Eimeria avium, Silvestrini and Rivolta.

Eimeria avium is responsible for fatal epizoötics among game birds such as grouse, pheasants and partridges, and domestic poultry such as fowls, ducks, pigeons and turkeys, and can pass from any one of these hosts to any of the others with the same effect. The organism is parasitic in the alimentary tract of the host, affecting more especially the small intestine (duodenum) and the cæca, but in some cases penetrating to the liver and multiplying there (as in turkeys), producing necrotic cheesy patches, that ultimately become full of oöcysts. The gut is rendered very frail by the action of the parasites, its mucous membrane is greatly injured, and is often reduced to an almost structureless pulp, riddled with parasites (fig. 68). Infection is conveyed from host to host by the ingestion of food or drink contaminated with the oöcysts voided in the fæces of infected birds. Oval oöcysts from 24 µ to 35 µ long and from 14 µ to 20 µ broad are the means of infection. The oöcysts develop internally four sporocysts or spores, from each of which two sporozoites are produced. The life-history[174] presents two phases: (1) The asexual multiplicative phase, schizogony, for the increase in numbers of the parasites within the same host; (2) the reproductive phase, following the formation of gametes (gametogony), leading to the production of resistant oöcysts, destined for the transference of the parasite to new hosts (sporogony).

The oöcysts usually reach the duodenum unharmed, with food or drink. Under the influence of the powerful digestive juices (especially the pancreatic) now encountered, the oöcysts soften, as do the sporocysts, and ultimately two sporozoites emerge from each sporocyst. The sporozoites are from 7 µ to 10 µ long, and each is vermicular with a uniform nucleus (fig. [69], A). After a short period of active movement in the gut, each sporozoite penetrates an epithelial cell (figs. 68 spz, 69, B), and once within, gradually becomes rounded (fig. 69, B, C). It grows rapidly, feeding on the contents of the host cell and living as a trophozoite (fig. 69, D). When the parasite is from 10 µ to 12 µ in diameter, usually multiplication by schizogony (fig. 69, E-H) begins. The nucleus of the parent cell, now called a schizont, divides into a number of portions that become arranged at the periphery (fig. 69, E). Cytoplasm collects around each nucleus (fig. 69, E, F) and gradually a group of daughter individuals (merozoites) is produced (fig. 69, G), the nucleus of each merozoite showing a karyosome.

Fig. 68.—Small piece of epithelial lining of gut of heavily infected Grouse chick, showing various stages in life history of the parasite Eimeria avium; par, parasite (trophozoite); mz, merozoite; sch, schizont; spz, sporozoite; ooc, oöcyst; ♂, male gametocyte; ♀, female gametocyte. × 750. (After Fantham.)

The merozoites of Eimeria avium are arranged “en barillet,” like the segments of an orange (figs. 68 mz, 69, G), therein differing from those of E. schubergi, which are arranged “en rosace.” They separate from one another (fig. 69, H), penetrate other epithelial cells, where they may, in turn, become schizonts. Eight to fourteen merozoites are usually formed by each schizont, twenty have been found, while in cases of intense infection when space has become limited, the number may be only four.