In North Cameroon, the vector of Onchocerca volvulus (causative
agent of human onchocerciasis) also transmits 2 filariae
of animals: O. ochengi from cattle and O. ramachandrini
from
wart hogs. In order to assess the qualitative and quantitative
roles of these ‘animal filariae’ in the epidemiology of
O. volvulus, the transmission of the 3 parasites was measured
in 2
villages and related to the endemicity of human onchocerciasis. In Galim,
a
cattle-farming Guinea savanna village where
wild animals are rare, the overwhelming majority of all filarial infections
found in the Simulium damnosum s.l. vectors
throughout the year were O. ochengi (89%). The remaining infections
were mainly O. volvulus (10·5%), and a few O.
ramachandrini (0·5%). In Karna, a crop-farming Sudan savanna
village where cattle are rare, but wild animals common,
flies were also more frequently infected with animal filariae than with
the human parasite. In the dry season, when nomadic
cattle are present, 54% of all infections were O. ochengi,
36% O. volvulus and 10% O. ramachindrini. In the rainy
season,
when the cattle move away, flies were mainly infected with O.
ramachandrini (52% of all infections) and secondly with
O. volvulus (48%). In Karna, the relationship between the Annual
Transmission Potential (ATP) of O. volvulus and its
prevalence in the human population conformed to other onchocerciasis foci,
in that a moderate ATP led to hyperendemic
onchocerciasis. In Galim, however, a 7-fold higher O. volvulus-ATP
(caused by a very high biting rate of the flies)
contrasted with a strikingly low endemicity of onchocerciasis. Since, at
the
same time, in Galim the transmission of O. ochengi (measured on
man) was very high (15000 L3/fly collector/year), we hypothesize
that the reduced endemicity of onchocerciasis in Galim is due to
‘natural heterologous vaccination’ by the large annual number
of
O. ochengi-L3, inoculated into man by anthropo-boophilic
S. damnosum s.l. The importance of micro-epidemiology for the
understanding
of the interlinkage of human and animal onchocerciasis is discussed.