Natural history

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Also known as: Siphonaptera

Life cycle

Details of the life cycle are available for only a few species. The four life stages are the egg, larva, pupa, and adult. Pearly white oval eggs are deposited on the body of, or in the nest or habitat of, the host animal. The larva is small and legless and feeds on organic debris, such as dried excrement, dried bits of skin, dead mites, or dried blood found in the host’s nest. The adult fleas pass freshly imbibed blood rapidly through their gut to produce fecal matter for the nourishment of their offspring, which is essential to the successful metamorphosis of certain species of flea larvae. After three (exceptionally, two) molts, the larva spins a silk cocoon that includes debris from the nest and enters the pupal stage. The pupa emerges as an adult some days or months later. Some species can enter an arrested state of development at the end of the pupal stage and will not emerge as an adult until a host is present. Depending upon the species or environmental conditions, the time required for a complete life cycle varies from two weeks to several months. The life span of the adult flea varies from a few weeks (e.g., Echidnophaga gallinacea) to a year or more (Pulex irritans). The life cycle of the European rabbit flea (Spilopsyllus cuniculi) and its host are perfectly synchronized. The sexual development of male and female fleas is under the direct control of the rabbit’s sex hormones. Thus, the eggs of the female flea mature successfully only if she is feeding on a pregnant doe rabbit. When the young rabbits are born, both flea sexes mature and leave the parturient doe for the nestlings and the nest, where they copulate and lay their eggs, thus assuring the flea larvae a suitable habitat for development. If the sex hormones of the female rabbit are controlled artificially by the administration of synthetic progestins (contraceptives), the sexual development of the female flea is also arrested. Although no similar case is yet known among other species of fleas, it has been recorded that rat fleas are less fertile if fed on baby mice than on their parents and that the mouse flea (Leptopsylla segnis) is more prolific if reared on family units rather than on individual adult mice. It seems likely, therefore, that the influence of the hosts’ hormones is more widespread than had been suspected.

Parasitism

Some fleas (e.g., shrew fleas and rabbit fleas) are highly host-specific, whereas other species parasitize a variety of mammals. The cat flea infects not only the domestic cat but dogs, foxes, civets, mongooses, opossums, leopards, and other mammals, including humans, if its regular hosts are not available. Related mammals tend to be parasitized by fleas that are themselves related. Thus, the rabbitlike pikas (Ochotona) living in the Rocky Mountains are infested with two peculiar genera of fleas that occur also on pikas in the mountains of Asia, indicating a close phylogenetic relationship between these geographically separated hosts. Bird fleas have adapted themselves in relatively recent times to their avian hosts. These share several common features, one of the most obvious of which is an increase in the number of comb spines on the upper surface of the thorax that serve to anchor them within the feathers.

It is interesting that monkeys and apes do not harbour fleas, nor do horses or the majority of ungulates. The most heavily parasitized group of mammals are the rodents (e.g., rats, mice, squirrels). Their habit of nest building in holes favours development of flea larvae. Animals with no permanent home tend to have fewer fleas.

Although both flea sexes feed avidly and repeatedly on blood (a single male exception never feeds), they survive for various periods away from the host. The rabbit flea, for example, can live for nine months at temperatures around the freezing point without feeding.

Form and function

Anatomically, adult fleas are a rather uniform but distinctive group, with many interesting modifications and few obvious links with other orders. The compressed body enables them to move swiftly through hairs or feathers of the host, while the backwardly projecting spines or combs serve to anchor them within fur, hair, or feathers. The mouthparts are modified for sucking blood and include barbed stylets that aid both in penetration of the flea into the host skin and in attachment of species that spend long periods fixed to the host (e.g., the sticktight fleas). Generally, fleas that live on diurnal hosts have well-developed eyes, whereas species that parasitize subterranean hosts (e.g., moles) or nocturnal animals (e.g., bats) have poorly developed eyes or none at all.

The most impressive adaptations are highly developed jumping legs. During their evolution, fleas, like the majority of parasitic insects, lost their wings. However, certain parts of the flight mechanism have been retained and incorporated in the jumping mechanism. For example, on flying insects, a rubbery protein known as resilin forms a hinge where the wings attach to the body. Resilin absorbs compression and tension created during each wing stroke, and the stored energy is transferred through an elastic recoil-like effect to assist in the initiation of each successive stroke. Fleas, despite their wingless state, have retained the resilin hinge on the thorax at the site where the legs attach to the body. When a flea crouches, the resilin pads become compressed, and they are maintained in this state by a muscle-controlled catch mechanism. In the instant prior to jumping, the catch muscles relax, and the energy in the resilin pads is transferred through the legs. This creates a lever effect that pushes each tibia and tarsus onto the ground and thereby causes the flea to jump.

Because fleas are able to leap horizontal or vertical distances 200 times their body length and to develop an acceleration of 200 gravities, they have been described as insects that fly with their legs. Certain species that live in nests high above the ground or in other unusual habitats crawl rather than jump. An incidental use of the unusual strength of fleas is in “flea circuses” in which they pull miniature carts and perform other feats.

Control

In controlling fleas it is best to treat simultaneously both the host nest or bedding area, which is the breeding site of fleas, and the infested host, since the larval and pupal stages usually develop away from the host’s body. For infested animals a commercial dust, spray, dip, or aerosol containing an insecticide or growth regulator is used. However, in some regions, fleas have become resistant to some insecticides, and new materials are required. For the control of larval and adult fleas away from the host, insecticides or growth regulators may be applied to the pens and haunts of the affected animals. Repellents may be effective in preventing attack by fleas.