Oriental rat flea

Xenopsylla cheopis

The Oriental rat flea , also known as the tropical rat flea, is a parasite of rodents, primarily of the genus ''Rattus'', and is a primary vector for bubonic plague and murine typhus. This occurs when a flea that has fed on an infected rodent bites a human, although this flea can live on any warm blooded mammal.
Plague Flea - Xenopsylla cheopis Description: Female rat flea. The dark squiggle near the end of the abdomen is a spermatheca, which tells us this is a female. Males would have a penis rod instead. Sadly, this girl has lost most of her legs.

Fleas are definite parasites, and this species is no exception. It is a parasite of rodents and is the primary vector of bubonic plague and murine typhus.

Fun fact:  Fleas can jump tp to 200 times their own body length.

*Whole mount microscope slide Geotagged,Oriental rat flea,United States,Xenopsylla,Xenopsylla cheopis,flea,plague flea,rat flea,tropical rat flea

Behavior

There are four stages in a flea's life. The first stage is the egg stage. Microscopic white eggs fall easily from the female to the ground or from the animal she lays on. If they are laid on an animal, they soon fall off in the dust or in the animal's bedding. If the eggs do fall immediately on the ground, then they fall into crevices on the floor where they will be safe until they hatch one to ten days later . They hatch into a larva that looks very similar to a worm and is about two millimeters long. It only has a small body and a mouth part. At this stage, the flea does not drink blood; instead it eats dead skin cells, flea droppings, and other smaller parasites lying around them in the dust. When the larva is mature it makes a silken cocoon around itself and pupates. The flea remains a pupa from one week to six months changing in a process called metamorphosis. When the flea emerges, it begins the final cycle, called the adult stage. A flea can now suck blood from host and mate with other fleas. A single female flea can mate once and lay eggs every day with up to 50 eggs per day.

Experimentally, it has been shown that the fleas flourish in dry climatic conditions with temperatures of 20–25 °C . They can live up to a year and can stay in the cocoon stage for up to a year if the conditions are not favourable.

Evolution

The Oriental rat flea was collected in Egypt by Charles Rothschild along with Karl Jordan and described in 1903. He named it ''cheopis'' after the Cheops pyramids.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderSiphonaptera
FamilyPulicidae
GenusXenopsylla
SpeciesX. cheopis