The Genesis of Malaria: The Origin of Mosquitoes and Their Protistan Cargo, Plasmodium falciparum

Alan L. Gillen, Frank Sherwin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Malaria is caused by the parasite belonging to the genus Plasmodium; however, creation biologists maintain this organism was not always parasitic. Plasmodium is probably a degenerate form of algae. Mosquitoes, the vector of Plasmodium, were probably designed to be pollinators, not parasite vectors. In this article, we present both the evolutionary and creation explanation for the origin of malaria with a mention to its vector, the mosquito.

The purpose of this article is to provide a reasonable explanation for the genesis of malaria. Microbiology and parasitology research based on the creation paradigm appears to provide some answers to these puzzling questions regarding the Plasmodium “kind” (Family Haemosporidae). Although we cannot be dogmatic (beyond the biblical text) regarding details of Plasmodium’s origin during Creation Week, we believe that a reasonable extrapolation from Scripture and biological data can be made about the nature of protozoans in a fully mature creation.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalDefault journal
StatePublished - Jun 19 2013

Keywords

  • malaria
  • mosquitoes
  • Plasmodium falciparum
  • parasitism
  • genesis of germs
  • apicoplast
  • ancient algae
  • symbiosis
  • biomatrix
  • organosubstrate
  • microbiology
  • parasitology

Disciplines

  • Biology

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