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On the Species of Isospora Parasitic in Man

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Clifford Dobell
Affiliation:
National Institute for Medical Research, London, N.W. 3.

Extract

Some two years ago a proposal was put forward by Wenyon (1923) to change the name of one of the well-known coccidial parasites of man—the parasite which, in my revision of the group (1919), I called Isospora hominis (Rivolta). for various reasons Wenyon concluded that there must really be two species of Isospora in man—not one, as I had assumed—and he proposed to transfer my amended name I. hominis to another organism, whose existence he deduced from the literature and from his own observations on the Coccidia of cats and dogs: but as this would leave the species which I had called “I. hominis” without a name, he proposed to rename it “Isospora belli”.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1926

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References

REFERENCES

Dobell, C. (1919). A revision of the Coccidia parasitic in Man. Parasitology, XI. 147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dobell, C. (1925). The life-history and chromosome cycle of Aggregata eberthi. Parasitology XVII. 1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pons, R. (1925). Coccidiose intestinale humaine à Isospora belli (Wenyon, 1922). Considérations générales. Bull. Soc. Path. Exot. XVIII. 570.Google Scholar
Reichenow, E. (1925). Über das Vorkommen von zwei Coccidienarten der Gattung Isospora beim Menschen. Arch. f. Schiffs- u. Tropenhyg. XXIX. 172.Google Scholar
Wenyon, C. M. (1923). Coccidiosis of cats and dogs and the status of the Isospora of man. Ann. Trop. Med. and Parasitol. XVII. 231.CrossRefGoogle Scholar