Neonatal hamsters were exposed to varying doses of Necator americanus larvae and changes in the stability of the resulting worm burdens were monitored over a period of 25 weeks. No change in worm burdens was evident for the first 5 weeks of infection, irrespective of the infection intensity, but the more heavily infected groups subsequently lost worms in a density-dependent manner. Male and female hamsters lost comparable proportions of their established parasite burdens indicating that there was no host sex-linked difference in this respect. By week 15 infections had stabilized and the residual worm burdens, usually a maximum of 30 worms survived for a considerably longer period of time. Initially the percentage of male worms varied from 45% to 50% but as infection progressed male worms comprised a significantly increasing proportion of the total worm burden. By week 25 the percentage of male worms was usually in excess of 60%. The growth of infected animals was not severely affected by N. americanus, even when heavy worm burdens established initially, but a significant effect was detected particularly in week 5, prior to worm loss, when the adult worms would have been feeding on intestinal tissues and causing blood loss for a period of about 2 weeks. The most severe depression in the packed cell volume was also recorded in week 5, indicating that anaemia had been initiated in infected hamsters. Whilst, the regulation of parasite burdens in weeks 5–10 post-infection may have resulted from host immunity, the persistence of the residual worm burdens, the marked density-dependent anaemia and the subtle effect on host weight, all reflected well-documented aspects of chronic human necatoriasis.