The uptake of Wuchereria bancrofti microfilariae (Mf)
by Culex quinquefasciatus
and their development in relation to human
Mf density were quantified by allowing a total of 1096 wild mosquitoes
to feed
on 13 volunteers sleeping under partially
open bed-nets. For each volunteer, each hour between 18.00 and 06.00 h
the Mf density
in finger-prick blood was determined and engorged mosquitoes collected.
Each hourly collection of mosquitoes
was kept separately. Half of them
was dissected within 18 h post-feeding for the presence of ingested Mf,
the
other half was reared for 12 days to allow for
the development of L3 larvae. About 20% of the latter mosquitoes died during
these 12 days and these harboured
significantly more larvae than the surviving ones, which could be an indication
of excess-mortality among heavily infected
mosquitoes. Assuming that variability in Mf uptake and in the number of
developed
L3 larvae can be described by a
negative binomial distribution, a maximum-likelihood procedure was applied
to estimate the relationship between human
Mf density and both the arithmetic mean Mf uptake and L3 development. Both
were
adequately described by a saturating
hyperbolic function that significantly differed from linearity. The
saturation level for Mf was estimated at 29 (CI: 20–54)
and for L3 larvae at 6·6 (CI: 4·3–17·0). Next,
the L3 yield was
related to Mf uptake indicating that the W. bancrofti–C.
quinquefasciatus complex shows ‘limitation’, i.e. a decreasing
yield for an
increasing uptake. Both the number of Mf
ingested and the number of L3 larvae developing per mosquito were found
to be
highly aggregated, with the level of
aggregation decreasing in a non-linear way with human Mf density.