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Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg., 20(6), 1971, pp. 795-803
Copyright © 1971 by The American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

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The Simian Malarias: Zoonoses, Anthroponoses, or Both?*

G. Robert Coatney
Malaria Program, Center for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia 30333

It now appears that Plasmodium cynomolgi, Plasmodium knowlesi, Plasmodium inui, and Plasmodium schwetzi are true zoonoses, although the latter, as Plasmodium ovale, may be an anthroponosis as well. Plasmodium malariae and Plasmodium rodhaini are generally accepted as being synonymous; if this is true, and it probably is, then this African quartan parasite is either one, i.e., a zoonosis or an anthroponosis, depending on which group of primates gave it origin. Certain African-Asian forms, Plasmodium gonderi for example, appear to be neither. The Central and South American primate malarias pose a different problem, for it is held that these malarias appeared only after 1492 when man, carrying P. malariae and Plasmodium vivax invaded this area from Europe. Consequently, each infection appeared in the monkeys as an anthroponosis. If this is true, synonymy is inevitable. If, on the other hand, Plasmodium brasilianum is a valid species, it acts as a zoonosis. There is reasonable doubt that Plasmodium simium acts in the same capacity.

Accepted for publication June 8, 1971.


* An expanded paper presented as a seminar for the Malaria Program, at the Center for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia, summer 1970, and for the Department of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, Tulane University Medical School, New Orleans, Louisiana, spring 1971.







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Copyright © 1971 by the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.