Researches on malaria Nobel Lecture, December, 12, 1902



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 infected in this very district.

 

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for months into a difficult pathological problem and a long pathological re-

port. But the work was not without interest, and I may be pardoned for touch-

ing upon it briefly. The disease had been first noticed by McNaught in 1882.

A few years later Government sent Giles to investigate it; and Giles, who

probably did not come much in contact with the real disease, seemed to have

been considerably misled, and in a report (which was nevertheless a very able

one) pronounced the malady to be ankylostomiasis

77

. Many of the practi-



tioners in the locality were not satisfied, however, and in 1896 Government

sent Rogers to make a further report. Rogers certainly saw the real disease and

concluded that it was a virulent form of malaria

78

. As it was evidently com-



municable, this implied that he held malarial fever to be communicable - a

thing which no one would believe at that time; but he maintained his opinions

with great courage and success. I was now sent in order, if possible, to decide

the question; and as my researches had shown that contrary to accepted views

malaria must be communicable from the sick to the healthy, Rogers’ position

was justified. But the exact nature of kala-azar still required definition; and, as

was called upon to judge between opposite opinions, I was forced into a



tedious enquiry - though it was my immediate personal impression that the

disease is malaria.

Mixed with the cases of kala-azar there were numerous cases of ordinary

malaria; and I found that the local practitioners could not distinguish which

was which until the cases became exceedingly severe, when they were declared

to be kala-azar. This generally happened only in the later stages of the cases - so

that in fact kala-azar seemed to be simply another name for a very severe and

frequently fatal form of malarial cachexia. As, moreover, many of the pa-

tients had ankylostomes, those who are familiar with the subject will under-

stand that my task was indeed a complex one. The plague-scare not having

penetrated here, I attacked the problem by examining the blood of all the

cases, both of malaria and of kala-azar. My results showed that while the para-

sites were easily found in the early cases, they became more and more scarce as

the disease advanced; until, in the old typical cases of malarial cachexia and



kala-azar 

neither parasites nor pigment were to be found, even in blood taken

from the spleen. I inferred then that kala-azar is probably only malaria, though

it was possible that some secondary infection might account for the gravity of

the cases. I also inferred - what no one would accept before then - that the

spontaneous disappearance of the parasites must be due to the gradual estab-

lishment of immunity; and that the low fever present in these old cases was

due, not to the parasites, but to some secondary intoxication from the greatly



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85

enlarged liver and spleen. And the same theories seemed to me to apply to



kala-dukh.*

This investigation required repeated examination of the blood of all the

cases which I could procure in the town; and, being made at high pressure,

involved another estreme strain on the eyesight. Nevertheless I examined

several batches of dappled-winged mosquitoes fed on cases with parasites, but

the insects selected for the work were like some of those abounding at Calcut-

ta, namely Anopheles rossi. All proved negative. My disappointment was con-

siderable, but I was not satisfied that the feedings, which were left to assistants,

were properly done. Many of the same insects caught in the houses of patients

were also negative. By the aid of my assistants, however, many fresh examples

of the law that the dappled-winged mosquitoes breed in pools of water on the

ground were obtained.

During my stay at Nowgong I wrote a short report, dated the 11th Oc-

tober, on the infection of birds by the bites of mosquitoes

46

. This was not



published until some months later; but of course the principal facts had long

previously been published by Manson

43

.

At the conclusion of my work on kala-azar I returned, now utterly ex-



hausted, to Calcutta.

20. Calcutta (November, 1898-February, 1899). The work confirmed. 

Arriving at

Calcutta on the 19th November I set to work to pick up the threads of my

work on Proteosoma; to obtain cases of human malaria (the plague-scare hav-

ing abated); and to write my report on kala-azar - this being a tedious business

requiring a full discussion of many intricate details. But my health had now

suffered greatly from the continuous exertion made under very trying cir-

cumstances; and I felt scarcely able to complete even my report. The labour,

the disappointments, even the successes, of the long and anxious investigations

of a single subject had been too much for me.

The cold and dry weather had now commenced in Calcutta; and the result

was that the malaria parasites had become much more difficult to find, either

in men or in birds. Added to this, as I had no room in my laboratory which

could be warmed by a wood fire (a gas-stove injured the insects), the mos-

quitoes could scarcely be persuaded to bite. And when they did so, it was ob-

served that the parasites developed in them much more slowly than in hot

weather.

* It has just become highly probable that these diseases are due to a new parasite recently

discovered by Leishman and Donovan.


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Moreover, all this time I had failed to obtain any assistance in India, and saw

no prospect of obtaining any. I had been told indeed by Manson that Dr. Da-

niels was to arrive shortly; but he was being sent, not really to assist me, but to

enquire into the correctness of my statements; and was to remain with me

only for a month or two. The only persons who had hitherto taken sufficient

interest in my proceedings even to look at my preparations (I mean from the

beginning of my work in 1895) had been Drs. Smyth, Maynard, Dyson, and

Cooke; and it was clear that no one really credited my results. Even the Di-

rector General, who was then in Calcutta, would not visit my laboratory. It

was the case of Galileo and the satellites of Jupiter over again!

I was, however, much cheered by the arrival of Dr. Rivenburg of the Amer-

ican Mission, who, hearing of my work, came all the way from a distant part

of Assam with his wife and children at his own expense to assist me. He had

been previously quite unknown to me; and I shall never forget his disinterest-

ed action and the help he gave me.

I had also been delighted to hear from Manson that the work was now being

taken up by Koch and the Italians. My papers had been published as described;

copies of my Proteosoma Report

42 

had been sent to many persons interested in



malaria. On the 8th November Manson wrote again informing me that he

had just despatched some of my preparations to Rome, namely to Bignami

and Charles.

I did not become acquainted with the admirable work of Koch until later

(section 23); but the efforts of Bignami and Grassi were now communicated

to me in a series of interesting and well instructed letters by Dr. Edmonston

Charles - a gentleman then staying in Rome, but whom I had never met, nor

corresponded with before. From these and their own papers it was clear that

the Italian writers had been inspired by my work and had been desperately

endeavouring to follow it; that they had detected the genus (Anopheles) of my

dappled-winged mosquitoes, and, after having seen my preparations, had

succeeded at the end of November in finding my pigmented cells in an Italian

species of this genus caught in infected houses. Bignami also claimed to have

infected healthy persons by mosquitoes obtained in this manner; and, by a

lucky stroke, one of the persons bitten by some Aclaviger was found to have

acquired the mild tertian parasite.

I shall return to this subject when describing the confirmations of my work.

The efforts of Bignami and Grassi were, however, obviously hasty and un-

reliable; while their writings were historically most inaccurate. They there-

fore did not impress me, and exercised no influence whatever in the comple-



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87

tion of my own labours. For several years afterwards, however, nearly all my



work was credited to these writers.

One interesting fact, however, I learnt from the Italians through Charles,

namely that my grey mosquitoes belonged to the genus Culex and my dap-

pled-winged mosquitoes to the genus Anopheles. Manson appears to have

sent some of the former to Grassi, and, according to Charles’s letters of the

19th November, he thought they were Culex pipiens - as a matter of fact they

were C. fatigans. Also from Charles’s letter of the 25th November and from

their own publications

4 8 , 5 1 

, it was clear that the Italians thought that my dap-

pled-winged mosquitoes were Anopheles claviger; and in his letter of the 6th

January it was stated that Grassi considered some dappled-winged mosquitoes

which I sent him were A. pictus - they were really A. rossi, Giles. I satisfied

myself more fully next year at the British Museum regarding the zoological

names of the mosquitoes studied by me. The Italians had no difficulties in these

respects as they had Ficalbi’s works on gnats to guide them. They received

some more of my preparations, through Dr. Charles, early in January 1899.

On the 22nd December Dr. Daniels, of the Medical Service of British Gui-

ana, arrived. Though somewhat sceptical at first, he was soon convinced after

seeing my preparations and repeating the experiments with care; and he fully

confirmed my work in a paper, which however was not published by the

Royal Society until much later

7 1

. I am much indebted to him for his assistance



and advice in connection with my report on kala-azar - no one has a profound-

er knowledge or a larger experience of malaria. In the time remaining to us we

attempted several series of experiments on human malaria (cases now being

more obtainable), mostly with the large brown dappled-winged mosquito of

Calcutta with which I had made most of my few but negative experiments

recently in Calcutta and Assam. These too proved to be negative. We ascribed

our failure to some mistake; but the cause was ill-fortune. The mosquitoes

were chiefly Anopheles rossi which in Bengal certainly do not easily take ma-

laria.*

* It was, of course, the cold weather in Calcutta, but Daniels and I used incubators. Ste-



phens and Christophers later obtained positive results in Nagpur with A. rossi, but only

by very careful artificial regulation of the temperature

71

.

It should be clearly understood that all my experiments on human malaria since 1897



were made under very unfavourable circumstances, and that I never considered my nega-

tive results to be at all final.

At this time I informed Daniels of some other details; and, in view of a controversy

which arose later, he has kindly testified to this fact in the following letter:



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Several distinguished visitors came to us at this time, F. Plehn, A. E. Wright

and A. Ruffer. They all accepted our work, except the "black spores" men-

tioned in section 17. Nevertheless Daniels and I did not think it right to

abandon them without clear evidence; but when, later, I found closely similar

bodies in large numbers in mosquitoes which had not been infected at all, my

faith was shaken; and it was disturbed still more when I failed to find them in

the infected mosquitoes of Sierra Leone. My doubts were mentioned in the

concluding sentences of my report on kala-azar.

That report was finished on the 30th January

79

, and contains eighty-one



closely printed folio pages. My years’ special duty was now almost finished;

but I could obtain no definite assurance from my chief that I was to be retained

on the same duty for an extended period. Yet the matter was vital to me.

Nearly all the money at my disposal had been spent in consequence of these

researches, chiefly because of the expenses connected with the constant changes

[footnote continued from p. 87]

Dear Ross,

October 8th, 1900.

I shall have great pleasure in testifying to the following facts :

(

I

) Shortly after my arrival in Calcutta in December, 1898, you showed me living



specimens of your "grey", "brindled", and "dappled-winged" mosquitoes.

You pointed out to me the attitude assumed by the last, the position of its larvae in wa-

ter, and the peculiarities of its eggs.

Since then I have learnt that these are characteristics of the genus Anopheles.

You contrasted these with the eggs and larvae of other mosquitoes, which I now know

to belong to the genus Culex.

(2) You showed me two species of "dappled-winged" mosquitoes, and I sent speci-

mens of them to the British Museum where they now are. They have been described by

Major Giles, I. M. S., as Anopheles.

You also showed me a specimen of a stomach of a mosquito with what are now known

as "zygotes". This you stated was the stomach of a "dappled-winged" mosquito, similar

to those you had shown me, which had been fed on a patient with crescents in 1897.

(3) I may add that the development of Proteosoma, as demonstrated to me by you in

the "grey" mosquito, is essentially the same as the development of "crescents" in Anophe-



les 

as observed by me in British Central Africa.

I am, Yours very truly,

C.W.Daniels.

P.S. As regards breeding-places, you informed me that the "dappled-winged" mos-

quitoes breed in puddles, the "brindled" mosquitoes generally in flower-pots, and the

"grey" mosquitoes in tanks, ditches, etc.

Major R. Ross.

C.W.Daniels.


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89

of station to which my family and myself had been subject; and if I were now



compelled to return to Secunderabad, I should not be able later to pay for my

passage to England. Moreover, both Daniels and Rivenburg were now leav-

ing me, and it was evidently foolish to expect any further assistance in India-

much more that of a trained entomologist, which I especially required for the

completion of my work on human malaria. I therefore determined to leave

India forthwith and to return to England, trusting to fortune to give me an

opportunity for finishing the investigation in a manner which I thought suit-

able. I mention these personal details as I have been blamed for leaving India

at that moment.

Before doing so, I urged upon Government the importance of taking active

measures for the prevention of malaria in accordance with my observations.

Besides advising the strict use of mosquito-nets for a personal prophylaxis, I

urged especially a campaign against mosquitoes as the best measure for towns

and cantonments, particularly against the dappled-winged mosquitoes, which

I said breed principally in water on the ground. My letter was published

later


55

, and I hope that the advice will soon begin to be taken.

I had also written a brief abstract of my work dated the 31st December,

1898. This was presented by Laveran to the Académie de Médecine on the

24th January, 1899, and was published soon afterwards

55

. In this paper my



obligations to Manson and Laveran were acknowledged, I hope, in the full

manner which honourable science demands. I wrote :

"Pour éviter tout commentaire erroné, qu’il me soit permis de déclarer ici

que mes travaux ont été entiérement dirigés par Manson, et que j’ai eu l’as-

sistance de ses conseils et de son influence à toute occasion; je dois aussi re-

mercier le Dr. Laveran de m’avoir envoyé ses avis si autorisés. Quand, en mai

dernier, je lui envoyai des spécimens de mes corps pigmentés du moustique,

il reconnut immédiatement la vraie nature de ces éléments."

And I added in conclusion,

"Je considère comme probable que la malaria est communiquée á l’homme

uniquement par les morsures des moustiques et peut-être d’autres insectes."

21. England (March-July, 1899). Foundation of the Liverpool School of Tropical

Medicine. 

On the voyage to England (February 1899) I had full time to con-

sider the present condition of our knowledge about malaria, especially in rela-

tion to the all-important subject of prevention. It was almost certain that in-

fection is caused solely by the bites of insects - but of what insects only? My long


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negative work had almost proved that the commonest Indian mosquitoes, the

grey and brindled genera, do not carry aestivo-autumnal infection, at least. On

the other hand, it was certain that two species of dappled-winged mosquitoes

in Secunderabad, and one species in Rome, do carry it; while, if Bignami’s

observation was to be trusted, the last species carries also the mild tertian infec-

tion. But Secunderabad and Rome are not the whole world; even in Bengal,

Daniels and I had not succeeded in infecting dappled-winged mosquitoes. The

question as to which species do or do not carry malaria might prove to be a

very complex one, not to be solved only by a few local experiences; there

are probably hundreds of species of mosquitoes in the world, each of which

would have to be tested unless we could find some good reason for limiting

the enquiry. I therefore sought for some such reason, and found one. For cen-

turies it had been known that malaria is connected with stagnant water on the

ground - not with water in the pots, tubs, and tanks which abound close to all

habitations, but with marshes and pools on the surface of the earth. Again

malaria was known to increase every year at the rainy season, and subsoil-

drainage was known to mitigate if not remove the disease. Hence it was ex-

tremely probable that the insects which carry malaria breed only, or chiefly, in terrestial

water. 

For years we had assumed that the disease is caused by organisms which

spring from marshes. We had been partially right, but not wholly right; it is

not the infective but the infecting organism which springs from the marsh -

not the germ but the carrier of the germ. Now, referring to mosquitoes alone,

which varieties of these insects breed only or chiefly in terrestial waters? I re-

membered my frequent observations on this point (sections 14, 15, and 19).

The grey and brindled mosquitoes breed chiefly in tubs and pots in India; but



the dappled-winged mosquitoes breed in pools on the ground. 

Now it was only these

last which, hitherto, had certainly been connected experimentally with ma-

laria.*


What a weapon for good was now placed in our hands! Hitherto when we

wished to remove malaria we were obliged to drain a whole area, recognizing

only that all terrestial waters seemed to be dangerous. Now we should be able

to go to a place and to point out the actual pools which cause the disease, by

showing that they contain the larvae of the culpable insects. The expense of

dealing only with these would be much less.

Shortly after my arrival in England in March I learnt something about the

zoological classification of mosquitoes from Mr. E. E. Austen of the British

* This reasoning was by no means obvious or even known until after our work at Sierra

Leone. In temperate climates grey mosquitoes (Culex) also breed often in terrestial water.



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91

Museum. I found that, as I had already partially learnt through Charles, my



dappled-winged mosquitoes were those of Meigen’s genus Anopheles and that

both my grey and brindled mosquitoes belonged to the same genus, namely



Culex. 

I was dissatisfied with this because it seemed to me certain that they

were of different genera. Recently Theobald in his fine work on mosquitoes

75

has separated them, placing the brindled mosquitoes in the genus Stegomyia,



and reserving the name Culex for the grey mosquitoes. Later, Giles deter-

mined that the grey mosquitoes which carry Proteosoma are Culex fatigans, and

called the large negative dappled-winged mosquitoes of Calcutta Anopheles

rossi.*

Meanwhile Manson had been urging his great scheme of creating special

schools for the teaching of tropical medicine, and had now received the sup-

port of Mr. Chamberlain. In Liverpool, Sir Alfred Jones, supported by Pro-

fessor Boyce of University College, Mr. Adamson, Chairman of the Royal

Southern Hospital, and many other gentlemen, had warmly taken up the

scheme, and now appointed me the first lecturer of the Liverpool School of

Tropical Medicine. I therefore found myself no longer an isolated worker, but

a member of a company determined to advance the interests of life and health

in the tropics. And it was an auspicious moment; for the great weapon which

had just been forged for the prevention of the most important of tropical

diseases needed strong hands to lift and wield it.

Almost my first care on returning to England was to consult eminent zool-


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