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Crithidias are monogenetic trypanosomatids possessing an epimastigote and a choanomastigote forms. One anterior thick flagellum emerges from a flagellar pocket with a kinetoplast at the base of the flagellum, central nucleus. Several species are parasitic of the gut of insects. Crithidia luciliae from calliphorid and muscid flies (Giemsa).
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Leptomonas jaculum . Swimming cells are needle-shaped, curved, often spiraling, gradually tapering posteriorly, 15-30 microns long. Contractile vacuole in the front end. Nucleus near the centre of the cell. Flagellum about the cell length. Attached cells nearly cylindrical.
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Trypanosoma Gruby, 1843. Digenetic trypanosomatids (two hosts) with a trypomastigote form in the blood of the vertebrate host, a promastigote or choanomastigote form in the vector insect and an amastigote form inside macrophages and tissues of the vertebrate host. The cell of the trypomastigote form has one flagellum adherent to the entire length of the cell body. A kinetoplast is situated at the base of the insertion of the flagellum and the nucleus is posterior or median. The epimastigote form has one apical flagellum with a kinetoplast at its base and a central nucleus. Salivarian trypanosomes occur in the blood of vertebrates and are transmitted by an haematophagous insect such as the tsetse Glossina fly in African trypanosomiasis; salivarian trypanosomes are transmitted by contamination by the feces of the insect vector such as the Rhodnius bug in American trypanosomiasis or Chagas disease. This image of Trypanosoma congolense, trypomastigote form in blood of humans (Giemsa staining).