gamonts
Gamonts are a cellular stage in the life cycles of some parasitic protists, especially within the Apicomplexa. A gamont is a cell that gives rise to sexual gametes during the organism's sexual phase. In piroplasms such as Babesia and Theileria, gamonts are the reproductive forms that participate in fertilization; in Babesia, for example, the sexual stages develop in the vertebrate host's blood and are subsequently ingested by a tick where microgametes and macrogametes fuse to form zygotes. In other groups, such as certain gregarines, gamonts develop into gametes within the parasite’s vector or host cell.
The term is not universally applied across all Apicomplexa, and in malaria parasites (Plasmodium) the term gametocyte
Functionally, gamonts are the bridge between asexual proliferation and sexual reproduction. After fertilization of a macrogamete