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| Entomology:  SIPHONAPTERA 1 Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Hexapoda: Class: Insecta: Order: Siphonaptera (Contact)    
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     General Summary of
  Siphonaptera             Siphonaptera (or Suctoria)
  are wingless insects that are ectoparasitic on warm-blooded animals.  They are compressed laterally with short
  antennae positioned in grooves.  They
  have piercing and sucking mouthparts, maxillary and labial palps are present,
  coxae are large and the tarsus has five joints.  Metamorphosis is holometabolous.  The larvae are legless and the exarate pupae are enclosed in a
  cocoon.   
           The mouthparts are made up of a
  pair of long serrated mandibles, a pair of short triangular maxillae with
  palps, and a reduced labium with palps. There is a short hypopharynx and a
  larger labrum-epipharynx similar to that of the Diptera. The labial palps,
  held together, serve to support the other parts, a function which is
  performed by the labium in the Diptera. In piercing the host, the mandibles
  are most important and blood is drawn up a channel formed by the two
  mandibles and the labrum-epipharynx (Borradaile &
  Potts, 1958).             The thoracic segments are free and
  wings are absent. Although the eggs are laid on the host they soon fall off
  and are afterwards found in little-disturbed parts of the host's habitat.  Therefore, in houses they reside in dusty
  carpets and unswept corners of rooms. 
  In a few days the larvae hatch and feed on organic debris.  The legless and eyeless larvae possess a
  well-developed head and a 13-segmented body. 
  At the end of the third larval instar a cocoon is spun and the flea
  changes into an exarate pupa from which the adult emerges.  The whole life cycle takes about a month
  in the case of Pulex irritans..              Pulex irritans is
  the common flea of European houses, but by far the most important
  economically is the oriental rat flea, Xenopsylla cheopis, which
  transmits Bacillus pestis, the bacillus of plague, from the rat to
  humans.  This bacillus lives in the
  gut of the flea and the faeces deposited on the skin of the host are rubbed
  into the wound by the scratching which follows the irritation from the bite. Ceratophyllus
  fasciatus, the European rat flea, also transmits the plague organism as
  can also Pulex irritans, but since the latter does not live
  successfully on rats, it is a less dangerous vector (Borradaile
  & Potts, 1958).                All members of
  the Siphonaptera feed exclusively on warm-blooded animals.  Their mouthparts lack mandibles and a
  siphon is formed of structures of the labrum, labium and maxillae.  The labium is an elongated  and fleshy covering mechanism.  The maxillae are interlocking and a
  maxillary sheath is present but not obvious. 
  A labrum is also present.               Fleas are apterous but their extinct ancestors are  known to have possessed wings, which was
  deduced from pleural plates on the thorax. 
  Hair-like structures called geocomb and corolla comb, are present on the head.  The antennae have three segments and lie
  in a groove on the head (see ent159).               The larvae are eruciform with a
  distinct head capsule.  They do not
  possess legs but leg-like setae instead. 
  Larvae are not parasitic. 
  There is an exarate pupa formed in a cocoon (see ent160).               There are over 1,100 species
  identified in the order.  Their
  general pest status of humans and domestic animals and their ability to
  vector diseases makes them of great economic importance.              Role as Parasites. -- 
  Fleas are well adapted to the parasitic habit by being laterally
  compressed.  They also have a very
  hard exoskeleton, their legs are developed for leaping and the hairs on their
  body are directed backward.   -----------------------------------------------   Diseases
  Transmitted
  by Siphonaptera             Bubonic Plague. -- The
  vector of Pasteurilla
  pestis is the rat flea.  This
  bacillus wiped out one quarter of the population of London, England.  The fleas search out other hosts as soon as
  the rat dies.  Transfer is
  accomplished by (1) defecation on the body and the inoculum is scratched into
  the wounds, and (2) the flea cannot digest the bacillus, so it regurgitates
  into the wound made by its mouthparts.             Sylvanic Plague. --
  The vectors are fleas that live on rodent hosts.  This is actually mild type of bubonic plague, which is found in
  Western North America.  However,
  humans may also die from infection.             Chigger Infection.
  -- The fertilized female flea burrows under the skin and becomes enormously
  distended.  A serious tropical form is
  known as Tunga
  penetrans.             Also
  View "Medical Importance".   -------------------------------------------   Details
  of Insect Taxonomic Groups             Examples of
  beneficial species occur in almost every insect order, and considerable
  information on morphology and habits has been assembled.  Therefore, the principal groups of insect
  parasitoids and predators provide details that refer to the entire class
  Insecta.  These details are available
  at <taxnames.htm>. ==============   |