Exsheathed infective larvae of Haemonchus contortus developed to the fourth stage in a salt solution under carbon dioxide. The changes in morphology were similar to those seen in worms from sheep, but development was slower. Greatest numbers of fourth-stage larvae were obtained from solutions gassed with 40% carbon dioxide. Small numbers of fourth-stage worms were present after 48 hr, and as many as 90% were in the fourth stage after 72 hr. Once larvae had commenced to develop carbon dioxide could be withdrawn, and development proceeded readily under air. Serum labeled with a fluorochrome was not detected in the intestine of third-stage worms cultivated in vitro, but was present in fourth-stage worms. It is concluded that under these conditions third-stage larvae of H. contortus were unable to ingest the medium. Stoll (1940) and Sommerville (1964) have shown that exsheathed infective larvae, i.e., third-stage larvae, of Haemonchus contortus will develop to the fourth stage after incubation in salt solutions at 38 to 39 C. Stoll's experiments demonstrated that more fourthstage larvae developed when an aqueous extract of liver was added to the salt solution and when the supply of oxygen was restricted. Silverman (British Patent 894603) has shown that development of H. contortus to the fourth stage can take place in Earle's salt solution together with hydrolysates of liver and casein. Sommerville (1964) suggested that either dissolved gaseous carbon dioxide or carbonic acid, or both, provided a stimulus which induced development. He failed to demonstrate any effect from the addition of liver extract. This paper reports the results of further experiments on the development of the thirdstage larva to the fourth stage in vitro. MATERIALS AND METHODS Infective larvae of H. contortus were harvested from cultures of sheep feces 7 to 14 days old, and stored in tap water at 5 C for about 1 week before use. They were prepared for culture by passage through three layers of lens tissue in a sterile Baermann apparatus which contained 0.4% sterile sodium chloride at 38 C. Larvae were subsequently washed twice by suspension in 0.4% sterile sodium chloride and centrifuged at 350 g. They were exsheathed by rinsing for 10 min in 20 ml of 0.4% sterile sodium chloride to which had been added 1 ml of "Milton" (1% sodium hypochlorlite: Received for publication 20 April 1965. * Present address: Department of Zoology, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia. Milton Pharmaceuticals Ltd., London). They were then washed six times in sterile 0.4% sodium chloride and counted. These procedures were essentially those followed by Weinstein and Jones (1956). In some experiments, exsheathment was achieved by gassing with 100% carbon dioxide. The larvae were suspended for 21/ hr at 40 C in a sterile solution of sodium bicarbonate, the concentration of which was adjusted to give pH 6 when gassed with 100% carbon dioxide (Umbreit, Burris, and Stauffer, 1957). Larvae were incubated in screw-capped roller tubes which contained either 2 or 3 ml of the medium and 1,000 larvae, i.e., either 500 or approximately 330 larvae per ml of medium. The roller drum was kept in an incubator in the dark and rotated 12 times each hour. The temperature was 40 ? 0.5 C unless otherwise indicated. The temperature inside the tubes was checked periodically with thermocouples inserted in the tube and connected to an automatic recorder. The medium contained the following components in grams per liter: NaCl, 8.23; KCI, 0.42; CaC12, 0.33; MgS04-7H20, 0.34. Sodium bicarbonate was added to give the required pH with the particular gas mixture used, usually pH 6. The amount of bicarbonate required was calculated from data supplied by Umbreit, Burris, and Stauffer (1957). All components were sterilized by filtration before use, and the final medium contained 500 mg streptomycin and 500 units penicillin G (sodium salt) per ml. Commercially prepared gas mixtures were used. These contained either 5, 20, 40, 60, or 80% carbon dioxide, 10% oxygen, and the balance nitrogen. In some experiments, 100% carbon dioxide or 50% carbon dioxide in air was used. Each gas mixture was passed through sterile cotton wool, a d cultures were gassed for 2 min in a water bath at the same temperature as for subsequent incubation. Tubes were sealed with a screw top containing a silicone rubber lining. Unless otherwise stated, larvae were incubated under the gas mixtures for 72 hr. At the termination of each experiment, sterility tests were made