The competence of 7 different stocks of Rhipicephalus appendiculatus
and R. zambeziensis to transmit 2 different stocks of
Theileria parva was compared by feeding nymphae of each tick stock
simultaneously on infected cattle and assessing the
infections in the salivary glands of the resultant adult ticks. There
were significant differences in the patterns of infection
of the 2 stocks (T. parva Muguga and T. parva Boleni)
in the different stocks of ticks, and these differences were shown
to be reproducible. The Muguga tick stock from Kenya and the Zambia tick
stock from Eastern Province had the highest
infections of T. parva Muguga and T. parva Boleni
respectively. The Zambia Southern Province tick stock and the
Zimbabwe Mashonaland West tick stock had the lowest infections of
T. parva Muguga and T. parva Boleni respectively.
The difference in mean abundance of infection between the most and least
efficient vector for T. parva Muguga was 63·3
while that for T. parva Boleni was 54·4 infected acini.
The implications of these results for laboratory transmission of T.
parva and for the epidemiology of theileriosis are discussed.