Simian Plasmodium species |
Regional distribution |
Human species resembling to them |
Asia |
P. coatney |
Malaysia, Philippines |
P. falciparum |
P. cynomolgi |
India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, Taiwan |
P. vivax |
P. eylesi |
Malaysia |
P. vivax |
P. fieldi |
Malaysia |
P. ovale |
P. fragile |
India, Sri Lanka |
P. falciparum |
P. hylobati |
Indonesia |
P. vivax |
P. inui |
India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan |
P. malariae |
P. jeffrey |
Indonesia, Malaysia |
P. vivax |
P. knowlesi |
China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan |
P. malariae, P. falciparum |
P. pitheci |
Malaysia |
P. vivax |
P. simiovale |
Sri Lanka |
P. ovale |
P. silvaticum |
Malaysia |
P. vivax |
P. youngi |
Malaysia |
P. vivax |
South America |
P. brasilianum |
Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Venezuela |
P. malariae |
P. simium |
Brazil |
P. vivax |
|
Table 1: Malaria species of simian origin isolated in Asia and in Southern America (modified from the reference quotation [4]). Their associated geographical distrubution, and the morphologic similarities to one of the four “classical” human plasmodia species (i.e. Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium vivax, Plasmodium ovale, and Plasmodium malariae), are pointed out. |