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Fact:
Two fleas entering a home can become 1 million in just 100 days!
Fact: A female flea can consume 15 times her body weight in blood
daily.
Identification
Adult
fleas are about 1/16 to 1/8-inch long, dark reddish-brown, wingless,
hard-bodied (difficult to crush between fingers), have three pairs
of legs (hind legs enlarged enabling jumping) and are flattened
vertically or side to side (bluegill or sunfish-like) allowing easy
movement between the hair, fur or feathers of the host. . They have
piercing-sucking mouthparts and spines on the body projecting backward.
Also, there is a row of spines on the face known as a genal comb.
Life
Cycle and Habits
Fleas
pass through a complete life cycle consisting of egg, larva, pupa
and adult. A typical flea population consists of 50 percent eggs,
35 percent larvae, 10 percent pupae and 5 percent adults. Completion
of the life cycle from egg to adult varies from two weeks to eight
months depending on the temperature, humidity, food, and species.
Normally after a blood meal, the female flea lays about 15 to 20
eggs per day up to 600 in a lifetime usually on the host (dogs,
cats, rats, rabbits, mice, squirrels, chipmunks, raccoons, opossums,
foxes, chickens, humans, etc.). Eggs loosely laid in the hair coat,
drop out most anywhere especially where the host rests, sleeps or
nests (rugs, carpets, upholstered furniture, cat or dog boxes, kennels,
sand boxes, etc.). Eggs hatch in two days to two weeks into larvae
found indoors in floor cracks & crevices, along baseboards,
under rug edges and in furniture or beds. Outdoor development occurs
in sandy gravel soils (moist sand boxes, dirt crawlspace under the
house, under shrubs, etc.) where the pet may rest or sleep. Sand
and gravel are very suitable for larval development which is the
reason fleas are erroneously called "sand fleas."
Larvae
are blind, avoid light, pass through three larval instars and take
a week to several months to develop. Their food consists of digested
blood from adult flea feces, dead skin, hair, feathers, and other
organic debris. (Larvae do not suck blood.) Pupa mature to adulthood
within a silken cocoon woven by the larva to which pet hair, carpet
fiber, dust, grass cuttings, and other debris adheres. In about
five to fourteen days, adult fleas emerge or may remain resting
in the cocoon until the detection of vibration (pet and people movement),
pressure (host animal lying down on them), heat, noise, or carbon
dioxide (meaning a potential blood source is near). Most fleas overwinter
in the larval or pupal stage with survival and growth best during
warm, moist winters and spring.
Adult
fleas cannot survive or lay eggs without a blood meal, but may live
from two months to one year without feeding. There is often a desperate
need for flea control after a family has returned from a long vacation.
The house has been empty with no cat or dog around for fleas to
feed on. When the family and pets are gone, flea eggs hatch and
larvae pupate. The adult fleas fully developed inside the pupal
cocoon remains in a kind of "limbo" for a long time until a blood
source is near. The family returning from vacation is immediately
attacked by waiting hungry hordes of fleas. (In just 30 days, 10
female fleas under ideal conditions can multiply to over a quarter
million different life stages.)
Newly
emerged adult fleas live only about one week if a blood meal is
not obtained. However, completely developed adult fleas can live
for several months without eating, so long as they do not emerge
from their puparia. Optimum temperatures for the flea's life cycle
are 70°F to 85°F and optimum humidity is 70 percent. The
cat flea is the most common flea in Ohio which feeds on a wide range
of hosts.
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