Neha Patil (Editor)

Haemocystidium

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Domain
  
Eukaryota

Class
  
Aconoidasida

Order
  
Chromatorida

Rank
  
Genus

Phylum
  
Apicomplexa

Subclass
  
Haemosporidiasina

Suborder
  
Laveraniina

Similar
  
Polychromophilus, Haemoproteidae, Plasmodiidae, Hepatocystis, Haemosporida

Haemocystidium is a genus of parasitic alveolates belonging to the phylum Apicomplexia.

Contents

History

The genus Haemocystidium was created to give a name to the haemoproteid of a gecko belonging to the genus Hemidactylus in Sri Lanka by Castellani and Willey in 1904. A second species in this genus was described in 1909 by Johnston and Cleland who found pigmented gametocytes in the blood of the Australian tortoise Chelodina longicollis. These species were transferred to Haemoproteus in 1926 by Wenyon.

The genus was resurrected by Garnham in 1966 when he created a new generic name - Simondia - for the haemoproteids of chelonians. He followed the opinions of Wenyon, Hewitt and DeGiusti and suggested that all these parasites belonged to the one species - Simondia metchnikovi. He retained the name Haemocystidium for the haemoproteids of lizards.

Levine and Campbell in 1971 moved all the species in Simondia and Haemocystidium into Haemoproteus an opinion that was followed by subsequent authors.

The genus Haemocystidium was resurrected again by Telford in 1996 when he described three new species of protozoa in geckos from Pakistan.

This genus like those of many protozoa may be further modified once additional DNA sequences are available.

Description

Haemocystidium is distinguished from Plasmodium by the absence of an asexual cycle in circulating blood cells

It is distinguished from Haemoproteus by meronts that do not form as pseudocytomeres.

References

Haemocystidium Wikipedia


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