Psorosperm (from the Greek ψωρα itch and σπερμα seed) is a former name of a number of parasiticprotozoa that produce cystlike or sporelike structures in the tissue of hosts. The term is now essentially obsolete.
Some that affect vertebrate hosts are now called coccidia.
The genus Psorospermium (which includes the species Psorospermium haeckeli) itself is a parasite of crayfishes, and belongs to an enigmatic group of unicellular organisms that some biologists think may be related to the common ancestors of animals and fungi.[1]
J. Müller introduced the term in German (as Psorospermien) in 1841.[2][3]
^F. J. Darier. De la psorospermose folliculaire végétante. Étude anatomo-pathologique d'une affection cutanée non décrite ou comprise dans le groupe des acnés sebacées, cornées, hypertrophiantes, des kératoses (ichtyoses) folliculaires, etc. Annales de dermatologie et de syphilographie, Paris, 1889, 10: 597-612.