A) Histopathology of Babesia hyperinfection in an adult lion that died during the epidemic. Small intestinal capillaries are occluded by parasitized red blood cells; B) Marked lymphocyte depletion in the lymph node of the same lion, indicating immunosuppression; C) Electron micrograph of intraerythrocytic piroplasms morphologically compatible with Babesia sp. in the deceased lion; D) Results of denaturant gradient gel electrophoresis for previously characterized carnivore hemoparasites and hemoparasites amplified by PCR from lion samples that demonstrated mixed infections. Lane 1, Babesia canis; lane 2, Cytauxzoon felis; lane 3, B. gibsoni; lane 4, mixture of B. canis, C. felis, and B. gibsoni isolates in lanes 1–3; lane 5, no DNA-negative control; lane 6, lion with Babesia sp. most similar genetically to B. gibsoni, B. felis and a previously uncharacterized Babesia sp.; lane 7, lion with Babesia sp. most similar genetically to B. gibsoni and B. felis; lane 8, lion with hemoparasites most similar genetically to B. gibsoni and Hepatozoon felis; lane 9, lion with a hemoparasite most similar genetically to H. felis.