Long asbestos fibres are generally considered to have greater disease-producing potential than short asbestos fibres. However, recent reports have suggested that short fibre asbestos appears to be as effective an inducer of macrophage growth factors and toxic oxygen species as long fibre asbestos, but that short fibres are readily removed from lung and do not gain access to tissues. Because smoke is believed to impair the clearance of asbestos fibres from lung, we examined the clearance of a short (geometric mean length 1.3 microns) amosite preparation administered by intratracheal instillation to guinea-pigs. Half the animals in each group were exposed to the smoke of 10 cigarettes daily. Animals were sacrificed 1 day, 1 week, or 1 month later, the macrophages recovered by lavage, and fibre concentrations and sizes determined by analytical electron microscopy in macrophages and lung tissue. A 30-fold increase was seen in total numbers of fibres retained in macrophages in smokers compared to non-smokers by 1 month, and there was an eightfold increase in retention of short fibres in the lung tissue by 1 month. By contrast, a long fibre amosite preparation (geometric mean length 8.9 microns) showed approximately the same increase in fibre retention in macrophages, but only a twofold increase in tissue retention. We conclude that (1) cigarette smoke markedly impairs the clearance of short amosite fibres from the lung with enhanced retention of fibres in both macrophages and tissue; (2) the effects of smoke on short fibre tissue retention appear to be greater than those on long fibre retention; (3) with the long fibre preparation, smoke causes increased tissue retention of relatively shorter fibres; (4) for both fibre size experiments, the increase in total fibres in macrophages in smoke-exposed animals reflects an increase in the total number of fibre-containing macrophages, rather than an increase in the number of fibres phagocytized per macrophage; (5) enhanced short fibre retention markedly increases total fibre surface area, a parameter which has been suggested as a measure of fibre toxicity, to the point where short fibres might under some circumstances have roughly the same potential toxicity as long fibres. These observations suggest that short asbestos fibres could play an important role in the pathogenesis of some types of asbestos-related disease in cigarette smokers.