Experimental infections of anopheline mosquitoes were carried out with Plasmodium falciparum gametocytes from 65 naturally infected patients in Cameroon. A comparison was made between infections with blood containing autologous plasma and blood in which the plasma was replaced with plasma from a donor without previous malaria exposure. A lower infection rate was observed in 50 of 65 autologous plasma samples. Transmission was significantly blocked in 3 infections. This indicates that, in a population living in an area endemic for malaria, blood plasma factor(s) can reduce the transmission capacity of gametocyte carriers to mosquitoes.