PREVALENCE OF MALARIA PARASITES (PLASMODIUM FLORIDENSEANDPLASMODIUM AZUROPHILUM) INFECTING A PUERTO RICAN LIZARD (ANOLIS GUNDLACHI): A NINE-YEAR STUDY
- 1 June 2000
- journal article
- Published by American Society of Parasitologists in Journal of Parasitology
- Vol. 86 (3) , 511-515
- https://doi.org/10.1645/0022-3395(2000)086[0511:pomppf]2.0.co;2
Abstract
The prevalence of malaria parasites was studied in the lizard Anolis gundlachi over a 9-yr period at a site in the wet evergreen forest of eastern Puerto Rico. Three forms of the parasite infected the lizards; these were Plasmodium floridense, Plasmodium azurophilum in erythrocytes, and P. azurophilum in white blood cells. Overall prevalence of infection for 8 samples during the study period was significantly higher for males than females (32% of 3,296 males and 22% of 1,439 females). During the study, the site experienced substantial climatic and physical disturbance including rising temperature, droughts, and hurricanes that severely damaged the forest. Parasite prevalence in the first sample, 8 mo after the massive hurricane Hugo, was slightly, though significantly, lower than for subsequent samples. However, overall prevalence was stable during the 9-yr period. The results show malaria prevalence is more constant at the site than found for 2 studies in temperate forests, and that the Puerto Rico system may be an example of the stable, endemic malaria described by standard models for human malaria epidemiology.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Climate and Satellite Indicators to Forecast Rift Valley Fever Epidemics in KenyaScience, 1999
- A Climate-based Distribution Model of Malaria Transmission in Sub-Saharan AfricaParasitology Today, 1999
- Horse sickness and ENSO in South AfricaNature, 1999
- Cycles of malaria associated with El Nino in VenezuelaJAMA, 1997
- Background and Catastrophic Tree Mortality in Tropical Moist, Wet, and Rain ForestsBiotropica, 1996
- Thermal Ecology of a Malarial Parasite and its Insect Vector: Consequences for the Parasite's Transmission SuccessJournal of Animal Ecology, 1995
- Climatic warming and increased malaria incidence in RwandaThe Lancet, 1994
- Infection Dynamics of Plasmodium Mexicanum, A Malarial Parasite of LizardsEcology, 1986
- Malaria in the Children of Freetown, Sierra LeonePathogens and Global Health, 1926
- CONTRIBUTION TO THE ANALYSIS OF MALARIA EPIDEMIOLOGY. V. SUMMARY*American Journal of Epidemiology, 1923