A heat-labile component of normal sheep serum (56 degrees C for 30 min but not 50 degrees C for 30 min) was able to lyse oncospheres in vitro. The degree of effect, and the proportion of oncospheres lysed, was related to the concentration of normal unheated sheep serum complement, or other sources of complement (rabbit, mouse) in the culture. Lower concentrations were required for lysis if the culture serum was obtained from sheep immune to E. granulosus infection. Heat inactivation of normal or immune sheep serum removed any lytic ability. No lysis occurred in any concentration of unheated foetal lamb serum. However, unheated foetal lamb serum was able to restore the lyric effect to heated normal or immune serum. This suggests that lysis in both immune and normal serum is antibody-dependent and complement-mediated. The lysis in normal serum would appear to be due to natural cross-reacting antibodies that can fix complement at the oncosphere surface. The complement lesion resulted in damage to the plasma membrane. This then peeled back, predisposing the oncosphere to osmotic destruction. The use of bleach to dissolve the embryophore caused damage to the plasma membrane similar to that caused by complement. Developing metacestodes at 3 days of age in vitro in immune serum were susceptible to the addition of complement at that time.