Abstract

The study of the ultrastructure of the blood stages of P.tropiduri Aragao & Neiva, 1909 shows close similarities between this species and P.floridense, another lizard malaria parasite. The absence of a rounded structure in the merozoites of P.tropiduri, and their tendency not to project beyond the original area occupied by the schizont are the ultrastructural characteristics that differentiate the two species.The close relationships of homology between P.tropiduri and the Plasmodium of birds are emphasized, and new evidence on their phylogenetic relationships is offered.P.tropiduri has a mode of ingestion and digestion similar to that of P. elongatum. When the size of the cytostome, the size of the boluses produced by the phagotrophy, and the size of the digestive vacuoles are compared, they are seen to be nearly identical in the two species.The comparative study of the structure of the cytostomes of the merozoites and the trophozoites, and of their relationships with the membranes that limit the parasites, gives new evidence that the external membrane of the trophozoites schizonts, and gametocytes is derived from the host cell.An exflagellatory apparatus is described from the microgametocytes of P.tropiduri, and its relationships with similar structures described from the gametocytes of avian Plasmodium and from Coccidia are discussed.

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