were probably only cases of relapse.
These arguments were not strong enough to be conclusive on either side of
the question. I had done quite right in spending so much time over the grey
and brindled mosquitoes; there was enough prima facie evidence against them
to demand a full enquiry. But before spending more time over them it was
now advisable to see whether further light could be obtained by epidemiolog-
ical investigation. The towns in which I had worked hitherto could scarcely
be considered more than moderately malarious; I now proposed to visit an
intensely malarious spot, at the height, too, of the malarious season in order
to ascertain what kind of mosquitoes prevailed there at the time; and reason-
ably hoped that this kind would prove to be the guilty species.
Being a servant of Government I could not of course go where I pleased
without leave, and I therefore first attempted to interest Government in my
work. Owing to my representations, the United Planters’ Association of
Southern India took up the matter; and the Honourable Mr. Bliss, Member of
Council of the Madras Government, and also Surgeon General Sibthorpe,
head of the Madras Medical Service, were kind enough to give their warm
assistance - for which I shall always be much indebted. The result was that the
Government of Madras made a proposal to the Government of India that I
should now be placed on special duty to investigate malaria. Most unfortu-
nately, however, in addition to the plague, the Afridi war broke out just about
that time, and owing to the paucity of medical officers the Government of
India was obliged to reject the proposal - May 1896. But in the meantime I
R E S E A R C H E S O N M A L A R I A
49
had determined to begin the enquiry at once at my own expense during two
months’ leave which was due to me; and accordingly, on the completion of
my duty in Bangalore, I went to the Nilgherry Hills for the purpose of study-
ing the point referred to in some of the intensely malarious plantations at the
foot of these mountains.
12. The Sigur Ghat (1897). I arrived at Ootacamund, the great hill station of
the Nilgherry Hills, at the beginning of April, 1896. This station which is
about 8,000 feet above sea-level, is surrounded by numerous tea and coffee
plantations, scattered here and there in the rich valleys of the hills, and even
for some distance out on the plains which encompass the hills like a sea. After
enquiry it was determined to begin the investigation in the Sigur Ghat, a long
natural trench which cuts at one stroke from the Ootacamund plateau right
down to the plain, and which had the worst reputation for malaria. A dâk
bungalow
(rest house) and a small plantation existed near the top of the trench,
at a place called Kahutti about 5,500 feet above sea-level; and owing to the
fact that a single night spent lower down the valley was thought enough to
ensure a bad and perhaps fatal attack, I determined to lodge here and visit the
lower valley only during the day time. Nevertheless even at Kalhutti I found
almost everyone suffering from fever - which was ascribed to miasmata float-
ing up the ravine from the plains below; and I had been there only a few days
and had paid only one diurnal visit to the plain when I myself suffered a bad
attack of aestivo-autumnal infection, the diagnosis being confirmed by the
microscope.*
After two weeks’ energetic treatment with quinine I was well enough to
resume operations; and this time went direct to the plantations at the foot of
the Sigur Ghat. The owner of one of them, Mr. Kindersley, wise enough to
reside in the hills during the intensely malarious season of the year, very kindly
placed his house in the plantation at my disposal; so that I was able to make a
thorough survey of the locality. Both plantations are situated in the midst of
luxuriant forest and undergrowth close under the declivities of the mountains,
* This case was remarkable for the brevity of its incubation period. I had never suffered
before from malaria, and was not likely to have acquired the infection either at Bangalore
or Ootacamund. I had arrived at Kalhutti at 6 pm on the 22nd April, and my attack com-
menced at
10 p.m. on the 25th April. I ascribed it at the time to my visit to the plain made
on the 23rd April; but there is now little doubt that the infection was acquired at Kalhutti
itself, which was swarming with mosquitoes, and where the servant of the dâk bungalow
and all his family were ill. At the same time I do not remember to have been bitten by
mosquitoes, and said so in my published account.
50
1 9 0 2 R .R O S S
and are copiously watered by irrigation channels. Almost all the native em-
ployees, as well as some families of aborigines, were suffering from severe
malaria - anaemia, emaciation, and enlarged spleen; and the parasites were
easily found in the blood of some of them. But I was not a little astonished
when I discovered that mosquitoes appeared to be almost absent in all the
houses. In spite of considerable rewards which were offered for their capture,
and in spite of the efforts of my trained servants and myself, scarcely any were
secured. I was informed indeed by some of the employees that they were often
bitten at night by insects which escaped in the morning; but these nocturnal
visitors were not procurable
*. Later however, we were told of some insects
which haunted the jungle and bit in the daytime under the trees. I found these
to be a small kind of brindled mosquito, and strongly suspected that they
might be the culpable species; and accordingly examined them closely and
called them Culex silvestris.
A part of my mission here was to enquire whether the mosquitoes in this
highly malarious spot did not contain parasites which were not contained in
the mosquitoes of the less malarious Bangalore. If they did so these parasites
might reasonably be suspected of being the mosquito stage of the malaria
parasite; and the question could subsequently be tested by experiment. These
mosquitoes were at once found to contain two new kinds of parasites, namely
crowds of active swarm-spores in the intestine, and, secondly, clusters of
spores (each cluster containing eight bright oval spores) in the ventral nervous
system. A close study was made of these organisms; but they did not appear
in some of the jungle mosquitoes which had been fed on patients. Strangely
enough, however, a person who volunteered to swallow a number of the
swarm-spores in water was attacked subsequently with fever, the malaria
parasites, however, not being found in his blood; but I heard afterwards that,
contrary to his statements, he had had fever just previously.
It will be remembered that Manson’s secondary hypothesis suggested that
the motile filaments, after living for some time in the mosquito, pass from it
into the water, and thence by ingestion or inhalation into man. My experi-
ence, however, tended to convince me that if such infection of water takes
place at all it must be very limited - in other words, that after their escape
from the dead mosquito, the organisms can neither travel far in the water nor
live long there. For if they could do this, almost all water in India would be
infected, and the disease would be universal, instead of being confined, as it is,
to certain spots. For the same reason the miasmatic theory never appealed
* Judging by our present knowledge, these must have been the offenders.
R E S E A R C H E S O N M A L A R I A
51
strongly to me. I thought it most likely that men became infected from small
stores of drinking water such as wells, cisterns, and even pots and ewers, into
which infected mosquitoes often fall and die while laying their eggs - a theory
which would easily account for the isolation of the malady, because, as I had
observed over and over again, mosquitoes seldom wander far from their
haunts. As, according to hypothesis, the organism escapes from the gnat into
the water in which she lays her eggs, it followed that water which contained
most larvae should contain most malaria parasites, and, conversely, that drink-
ing water free from larvae would probably be free from parasites. Now in
attempting to apply these considerations to the case of the Sigur plantations,
I found them at once opposed by many facts. Not only were there few adult
mosquitoes there, but the larvae could be found only in a few stagnant puddles
in the depth of the jungle, while the drinking water was obtained from rapid
streams just issued from pure mountain springs, in which larvae neither existed
nor were likely to exist.
These facts again forced me to reconsider the whole of Manson’s secondary
hypotheses, and to search for more plausible theories. Three such theories oc-
curred to me. I had long observed that while they are sucking blood, gnats
deposit minute drops of excretae on the skin every ten seconds or so; and I
had actually shown that these drops may contain the pseudo-navicellae of gre-
garines. It was therefore possible that they might contain the spores of the
parasites of malaria, which might then be able to work their way through the
skin and into the blood of the victim. Another hypothesis of mine was that
the malarial spores might be voided by the insects, not upon the skin, but upon
rotting vegetation or damp earth (e.g. the floor of the houses and huts of na-
tives), and might there possibly develop into some extracorporeal form cap-
able of infecting man by air-borne spores.* The third theory was that infected
mosquitoes could in some mysterious manner introduce the parasites directly
into the blood during the acts of puncture and haustellation. This view was
* This was by no means an idle conjecture, and was indeed strictly based upon the anal-
ogy of Cunningham’s life history of the Amoeba coli, which that observer stated was void-
ed from the intestines of cattle and afterwards formed pseudo-plasmodia in the exposed
dung-men and cattle being infected by the air-borne spores of these pseudo-plasmodia.
He thought that the organisms were related to the Mycetozoa and called them Protomyxo-
myces coprinarius
. His important statements have been ignored but not disproved by sub-
sequent writers. Similarly I thought that the parasites of malaria might possibly be ex-
tracted from the circulation by mosquitoes, be deposited by them upon the damp floors
of dwelling houses and there develop in a like manner. This hypothesis was at that time as
cogent as any other.
52
1 9 0 2 R . R O S S
similar to that of King and Bignami, with this difference that while these ob-
servers thought that the mosquitoes derived the parasites from marshes, I held,
in consequence of Manson’s induction, that they derived them from patients.
In the account of my work in the Sigur Ghat which was published a few
months later
40
it was stated that this was the hypothesis which I now held to
be the probable one.*
It was during these researches that I first noticed the "dappled-winged mos-
quitoes". While looking for mosquitoes in a vacant rest house at the foot of
the ghat I captured an insect resting in a peculiar attitude with the body-axis at
an angle to the wall (as I noticed at the moment). On examination, its wings
were found to have a series of black marks along the anterior nervure; but as
I saw no more individuals of the species, I did not think the observation to be
of sufficient importance to be included in my paper. Yet, had I only known it
at the time, this was the very species I was in search of!
Indeed the whole of this investigation afforded a clear example of the well-
known ambiguity of epidemiological work. Of the kind of insect which was
really causing the disease at the time, I saw but a single individual! The reason
is now quite apparent. Unlike the grey and brindled mosquitoes which rest in
the dark comers of dwellings by day in large numbers, many species of dap-
pled-winged mosquitoes fly out at daybreak. It is true that other species of
this genus have more domestic habits and can therefore be more easily found;
and if fortune had been my friend in those days she would have brought me
to a place where these species abound - such as places afterwards visited by me
in Assam and the Darjeeling Terai. Nor does it follow in any case that the
predominant species of mosquito in a locality must be the malaria-bearing
species there; there is no reason why the innocent species should not out-
number the dangerous species even in the most malarious spots: while lastly,
it is now known that the dangerous species may abound where there is no
* I said, "On the whole from a consideration of the epidemiological facts I should be in-
clined to favour the idea of contact being the mode of infection; and may add that one of
my servants who was employed in catching the adult silvestris by allowing them to settle
on his legs and arms was attacked five days afterwards by the quartan parasite". By con-
tact I meant contact of the mosquito with the skin as explained further on by the following
words : "Since the presence of a human being in the jungle at once causes a number of sil-
vestris
mosquitoes to attack him on all sides, it is very clear that he may readily be infected
by their agency, either by injection of the parasite through the puncture, or by its deposi-
tion on the skin in the shape of spores contained in the insect’s faeces, which, observation
shows, are always discharged in quantity during the act of haustellation". My theories re-
garding infection are also referred to in my previous paper
30
.
R E S E A R C H E S O N M A L A R I A
53
malaria at all. Hence, though I did not know it at the time, it is impossible to
indicate, much less to certify, the malaria-bearing species by its numerical rela-
tions with other species in malarious localities.
One of the principal results of my work in the Sigur Ghat was that it led me
to doubt the probability of infection by drinking water. I should have liked
to remain there much longer; but on the expiry of my leave was forced to
return to my regiment at Secunderabad, five hundred miles away, and was
never able to visit the place again.*
13. Secunderabad (1897). The fundamental discovery.
On my return to Secunde-
rabad (July 1897), the first thing I noticed was that the malaria had continued
unabated during almost two years since I had left; if anything it was worse,
and many recruits who had recently joined the regiment had been attacked -
as they averred, for the first time. This clearly showed that these cases were not
merely relapses, and that some cause of infection was actually at work among
the troops. It was for me to discover the cause; and I determined to return to
my old method, and to test experimentally all the kinds of mosquitoes preva-
lent anywhere near the barracks. I had now been studying the subject almost
constantly for over two years, and had become so very familiar with the mi-
croscopical appearance of the various structures of the mosquito** that I felt
the mosquito stage of the parasite could no longer escape me if it existed at all.
Numerous "cases of crescents" suitable for the experiments were in my hos-
pital, and it was obvious from the number of fresh cases occurring that the
proper kind of mosquito must be somewhere about. If I failed it could only
be because there was some flaw in Manson’s induction.
At the same time a possible fallacy was detected in the logic of that part of
the theory which suggested that the motile filaments after their escape from
the parent cells in the mosquito’s stomach must take up their abode in the tissues
of the insect. The vital and inevitable part of the induction consisted only of
the reasoning which inferred that the stomach of the mosquito is the natural
locus
for the escape of the motile filaments. It was only conjecture to say that
they must enter the tissues; because for all we knew it was possible that they
might remain in the intestine for some time and then be voided, probably in
some altered form, either upon the ground or upon the human skin (see my
* I had been offered an appointment in Berar, but had declined it in order to carry on
these researches in the Sigur Ghat. I suffered severely for this later on.
**
This does not mean that I was equally familiar with the macroscopical anatomy of the
mosquito - a subject which has only recently been dealt with fully.
54
1 9 0 2 R.R OS S
hypotheses in the previous section). It was therefore now necessary to examine
the evacuations as well as the tissues of my subjects.
I commenced work by making a careful survey of the various kinds of mos-
quitoes which were to be found in the officers’ quarters, in the regimental hos-
pital, and in the numerous little houses of the native soldiers, which consti-
tuted the barracks or "lines", as they were called. I found first, the insects with
which I was familiar during my previous studies here in 1895, namely (a)
several species of brindled mosquitoes, and (b) two species of grey mosqui-
toes. But at the same time I was astonished at observing that the whole place
was overrun by swarms of (c) a small and delicate variety of mosquitoes,
which were at once observed to rest with the body-axis at an angle to the
wall, and which had spotted wings. In fact they were evidently of the same
genus (though not of the same species) as the mosquito which had been previ-
ously found in the Sigur Ghat - a genus, or perhaps family, quite distinct from
those of the grey and brindled mosquitoes with which I had hitherto been
working.
It is now time to speak more particularly of all these mosquitoes. I had writ-
ten repeatedly to Manson, to various booksellers in England, and to several
persons in India who I thought might help me, for some literature on the sub-
ject; but could obtain nothing except a few notes by popular authors, such as
Thomas, who wrote on piscatorial subjects in India. I could not even obtain
any adequate works on the anatomy of insects in general. Of Ficalbi’s work
on European gnats - which would have helped me immensely - I was igno-
rant, and received no copy. Manson had found the name of one species of
mosquito which I sent to him; but this did not help me, for what I required
was a scientific work on the structure and classification of the mosquitoes as
a group. I was therefore obliged, as mentioned in section 10, to trust to my
own rough methods of classification; and these were based, not on the criteria
of entomologists, such as the structures of the mouth parts or the nervures of
the wings, but on the general appearance and markings, the eggs, the habits,
etc., of the insects. It was only the working classification of an amateur with-
out literature to guide him, and made for his own convenience; but, as events
have proved it was roughly correct. Up to July 1897 I recognized the two
following groups :
(a) Brindled mosquitoes (
now recognized as belonging to the genus Stegomyia,
Theobald). Body and legs boldly marked black and white, or brown and
white. Wings plain. Biting voraciously, mostly in the day-time. Resting with
abdomen hanging towards the surface of attachment, and the last pair of
R E S E A R C H E S O N M A L A R I A
55
legs tilted on the back. Breeding mostly in pots of water. Larvae floating head
downwards and possessing short stumpy breathing tubes. Eggs black, oval,
and laid separately.
(b) Grey mosquitoes (now recognized as belonging to the genus Culex, Linn.
as defined by Theobald). Back barred with transverse brown and white stri-
pes. Legs and wings plain. Biting somewhat timidly, mostly at night. Resting
with abdomen hanging towards surface of attachment. Breeding mostly in
wooden tubs, ditches, garden cisterns, and drains. Larvae floating head down-
wards and possessing long breathing tubes. Eggs elongated and somewhat
lanceolate and laid simultaneously in "rafts".
I had found mosquitoes of the same genera, though possibly of different
species, at Bangalore and at several spots in the Nilgherry Hills; and also at
Bombay, Poona, and Madras during short visits made to these cities in con-
nection with my sanitary duties at Bangalore. I remembered also to have seen
similar insects in Burma and the Andamans; so that it was reasonable to sup-
pose that they constituted the common or ordinary kinds of mosquitoes in
India. The new mosquitoes which I now and subsequently met with, and
named dappled-winged mosquitoes, were evidently of quite another genus to
the foregoing, and were distinguished by me by the following characteristics:
(c) Dappled-winged or spotted-winged mosquitoes (now recognized as belong-
ing to the genus Anopheles, Meig.). Body, legs, and proboscis marked brown
and white, or dark and light brown. Wings with several dark blotches on or
near the anterior nervure. Resting with abdomen pointed outward from the
surface of attachment. Body more elegant, and shaped like that of a humming-
bird moth. Breeding mostly in natural pools of water on the ground. Larvae
floating flat on the surface of the water like sticks, and possessing no breathing
tube at all. Eggs laid singly; cohering in triangular patterns, and shaped like an
ancient boat with raised prow and stem, and surrounded with a membrane
which - when the egg is seen in profile - gives the appearance of a bank of Dostları ilə paylaş: |