Fig. 44.—Trypanosoma theileri. × 2,000. (After Laveran and Mesnil.)

This parasite, 60 µ to 70 µ long, and 4 µ to 5 µ broad, is distinguished for its large size, though it is not so large as T. ingens from Uganda oxen, whose length may be 72 µ to 122 µ, and breadth 7 µ to 10 µ. The posterior end of T. theileri is drawn out. Small forms of the flagellate are known, 25 µ to 53 µ in length. Probably other forms of the parasite have the nucleus posterior, and these flagellates were formerly separated as T. transvaaliense (Laveran, 1902). Myoneme fibrils may be seen on its body. The pathogenicity of this organism is doubtful, it was formerly thought to be the causal agent of “gall-sickness” in cattle in South Africa. T. theileri also occurs in Togoland, German East Africa, and Transcaucasia. Allied or identical parasites occur in cattle in India.

Trypanosoma theileri, specific to cattle, is perhaps transmitted by the fly Hippobosca rufipes in South Africa.

Trypanosoma hippicum, Darling, 1910.

Trypanosoma hippicum causes the disease of mules known as “murrina.”[106] It was found in mules imported to Panama from the United States. It can live in other equines. The parasite varies from 18 µ to 28 µ in length, and is from 1·5 µ to 3 µ broad. Its undulating membrane is little folded. The trypanosome has a noticeable blepharoplast. It can penetrate mucous membranes, and it is thought that the trypanosome may be transmitted during coitus. It may also be spread mechanically by species of Musca, Sarcophaga and Compsomyia, sucking the wounds of infected animals and carrying over the trypanosomes to wounds on healthy ones.

Endotrypanum schaudinni, Mesnil and Brimont, 1908.

This organism was discovered in the blood of a sloth (Cholœpus didactylus), in South America (French Guiana).[107] It possesses special interest, in that the best known form of the organism is endoglobular, inhabiting the erythrocytes of the sloth. A free trypanosome in the same animal was considered to be different from the endoglobular form, which was somewhat like a peg-top, and possessed a short flagellum. Darling[108] (November, 1914) has seen the organism in Panama. He describes free crithidial forms in shed blood, but not in the blood-stream of the sloth.

Trypanosoma boylei, Lafont, 1912.

This is a parasite of the Reduviid bug, Conorhinus rubrofasciatus. The insect attacks man in Mauritius, Réunion and other places. Lafont infected rats and mice by intraperitoneal injection with the gut-contents of infected bugs. Trypanosomes appeared in the mice. Other flagellate types were assumed by the parasites in the bug.