Fleas | ||||||||
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Scientific classification | ||||||||
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Families | ||||||||
Tungidae - Sticktight and Chigoe fleas Pulicidae - Common fleas Coptopsyllidae Vermipsyllidae - Carnivore fleas Rhopalopsyllidae - Marsupial fleas Hypsophthalmidae Stephanocircidae Pygiopsyllidae Hystrichopsyllidae - Rat and mouse fleas Leptopsyllidae - Bird and rabbit fleas Ischnopsyllidae - Bat fleas Ceratophyllidae Amphipsyllidae Malacopsyllidae Dolichopsyllidae - Rodent fleas Ctenopsyllidae |
Flea is the common name for any of the small wingless insects of the (order Siphonaptera). Fleas are external parasites, living off the blood of mammals and birds.
NOTE: There is also a genus of Protozoa named Siphonaptera
Some well known flea species are the Cat Flea (Ctenocephalides felis), Dog Flea (Ctenocephalides canis), Northern Rat Flea (Nosopsyllus fasciatus) and Oriental Rat Flea (Xenopsylla cheopis).
In most cases fleas are just a nuisance to their hosts, but in some people and animals suffer allergic reactions to flea saliva resulting in rashes. Flea bites generally result in the formation of a slightly-raised swollen itching spot with a single puncture point at the center.
However, fleas can transmit disease. One devestating example of this was the bubonic plague, transmitted between rodents and humans. Murine typhus (endemic typhus) fever, and in some cases tapeworms can also be transmitted by fleas.