Abstract
Neonate Simulium females from an endemic area of human and bovine onchocerciasis in North-Cameroon were injected in one set of experiments with microfilariae (mff) of Onchocerca dukei and in another with mff of O. ochengi. Onchocerca dukei was found to develop to infective third-stage larvae in Simulium flies: 148 third-stage larvae (28·1% of injected mff) were recovered in S. hargreavesi, seven (10·4% of injected mff) in S. vorax,and 12 (1·3%) in S. damnosum s.l. Onchocerca ochengi mff developed in S. hargreavesi at a rate of 17·3% and in S. damnosum s.l. at 16·1%, yielding a total of 77 and 32 third-stage larvae respectively. Onchocerca dukeiinfective larvae had a mean length of 717·3 μm and a mean maximum diameter of 17·5 pm, and were slightly shorter and conspicuously thinner than those of O. ochengi (748·3 μm x 20·4 μm). All larval stages of O. dukeitypically had an attenuated anterior end. The implications of these findings for the epidemiology of human onchocerciasis are discussed.