Dr. Kassai Tibor - Dr. Murai Éva szerk.: Parasitologia Hungarica 6. (Budapest, 1973)
1853), Neoheterophyes bychowskyi Khotenovsky, 1970, H . brevi corpus Matskási, 1973, and N . huynhi Matskási, 1973. This species, discovered in India, belongs to the genus Neoheterophyes, supported by the glabrous, characteristically shaped accessory sucker, the length of the caeca and the position of the vitellary glands (KHOTENOVSKY, 1970; MATSKÁSI, 1973). Differential diagnosis: N. topali sp . n. differs from N . by- chowskyi by the significantly different measurements of the body, the different ratio of the suckers (the two organs are equal in N. bychowakyi , while the oral sucker of N. topali is larger than its acetabulum), the position of the ovary (the ovary in N. topali is situated behind the acetabulum and not paraacetabularly ) as well as by the position and the shape of the cirrus-sac. The new species differs from N.bre vicorpus by the different measurements and shape of the body, the position of the ovary and vitellaries, as well as by the shape and position of the cirrus-sac. Holotype : slide 1/29 (Locality: Ghum - North India, coll: Gy. TOPÁL; date of collecting: 21 October, 1967), deposited in the Parasitological Collection of the Hungarian Natural History Museum, Budapest. Derivatio nominis: I dedicate the new species to György TOPÁL, mammalogist, the collector of the material. Lecithodendriidae Odhner, 1910 Lecithodendrium linstowi Dollfus, 1931 - (Pig. 3) Hosts: Megaderma lyra (EH.), Scotophilus teramincki (Ca.), Sec— tozous dormeri (Ja.), Taphozous melanopogon (Ud.), T. longimanus (Ca.), Miniopterus sehreibersi(Ma . ), Myotis longipes (Bu.), Pipistrellus ceylonicus (Ka.), P. kuhli (Sr.), P. mimus (Na., Ca.,Sa.,Ba. ), Hipposideros ater (Ko.), Rhinolophus rouxi (Ud.), Rh. lepidus (Da.); Localization: small intestine. L. linstowi occurred in every one of the collecting localities (except the Himalaya). The extensity and intensity of the infection were very high. PANDE (1935c) published this species first from India under the name Mesodendrium mödlingeri , later