Baseline epidemiological and entomological studies were conducted in 5 different areas of The Gambia before the introduction of a national malaria control programme, the objective of which was to treat all the bed nets belonging to people living in primary health care villages with insecticide. All malariometric indices used (parasite density, parasite rates, splenomegaly, and packed cell volume) indicated that malaria transmission was more intense in the east of the country than elsewhere. High transmission in the east was associated with a high sporozoite rate but not with the greatest vector abundance; the lowest malaria prevalence rates were found in villages which were close to very productive breeding sites of Anopheles gambiae s.l. Bed net usage was strongly correlated with vector density and the highest malaria rates were found in villages where bed net usage was relatively low. These results suggest that in The Gambia malaria prevalence rates are reduced where nuisance biting by mosquitoes is sufficient to encourage the population to protect themselves with bed nets.