Is Malaria a Mosquito STD?

QUESTION

Is Malaria a type of STD for mosquitoes?

ANSWER

No. Mosquitoes pick up the malaria parasite from feeding on the blood of infected humans. Since only female mosquitoes feed on blood (the males feed on nectar), male mosquitoes never get infected with the malaria parasite. The life cycle of malaria in the mosquito is also completely different than in humans, and mosquitoes have a completely different physiology and immune system to humans, so it cannot be said that they get the same disease as we observe when people get infected with malaria.

Malaria Causes

QUESTION

What are the causes of malaria?

ANSWER

Malaria is caused by a parasite called Plasmodium, which is transmitted via the bites of infected mosquitoes. In the human body, the parasites multiply in the liver, and then infect red blood cells. Usually, people get malaria by being bitten by an infective female Anopheles mosquito. Only Anopheles mosquitoes can transmit malaria and they must have been infected through a previous blood meal taken on an infected person. When a mosquito bites an infected person, a small amount of blood is taken in which contains microscopic malaria parasites. About 1 week later, when the mosquito takes its next blood meal, these parasites mix with the mosquito’s saliva and are injected into the person being bitten.

Because the malaria parasite is found in red blood cells of an infected person, malaria can also be transmitted through blood transfusion, organ transplant, or the shared use of needles or syringes contaminated with blood. Malaria may also be transmitted from a mother to her unborn infant before or during delivery (“congenital” malaria).

Malaria and Nkadu Luo

QUESTION

When did professor Nkadu Luo discover that female mosquito causes malaria?

ANSWER

Professor Nkadu Luo is a microbiologist and immunologist in Zambia. Most of her work has been on HIV/AIDS and sickle cell anaemia. She has also been a key figure in promoting screening of blood banks in Zambia for infectious diseases such as HIV and malaria. However, the discovery that female mosquitoes transmit malaria was made much earlier—taxonomists as early as the mid-19th century were aware of differences in the mouthparts between male and female mosquitoes of certain species, which allowed them to determine that they were feeding on different things (female mosquitoes who feed on blood have very specialised mouthparts, for example).

Then, in the late 1890s, a British doctor called Ronald Ross discovered that mosquitoes transmit malaria parasites when they feed on blood. Prof Luo probably learned about the cycle of malaria transmission during her extensive biomedical training.