What is a human flea?

A flea.

Pulex irritans, or the human flea, is a small blood-sucking insect that can be found on almost every continent. It was a common nuisance in families rich and poor during the Middle Ages, but was rarely found indoors in 2011. These insects often irritate the skin when they bite human hosts. They are also capable of transmitting serious diseases from one person to another.

A human flea can feed on skunks.

The human flea is less common than other varieties such as mouse or cat fleas. This species usually breeds around styes. Human fleas primarily prefer pig and human blood, but they also feed on the blood of badgers, foxes, skunks, and some other wild mammals.

Pulex irritans fleas are typically one-sixteenth to one-eighth of an inch long (1,587 to 3,175 mm). They have dark brown or black bodies, with long spiny legs; short jointed antennae; flat sides; and without wings. They move from one place to another by crawling or jumping. A human flea can jump up to 100 times its body size.

The human flea can transmit bacteria from mice to humans.

These insects have piercing and sucking mouthparts. Its saw-like mandibles cut through the host’s flesh and release an anticoagulant into the skin to prevent blood from clotting while the insect feeds. They then suck the blood of the human or animal host. Fleas can live for months or years without feeding when acceptable hosts are not available.

Female fleas lay eggs on the bodies of their hosts. The eggs are not spiked or sticky and do not stick to the host, so they often fall off the animal onto the litter. The eggs hatch into white, worm-like larvae with no legs. Human flea larvae feed on adult fecal matter and animal organic matter.

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Young fleas shed their exoskeletons three times before entering the pupal stage. They mature inside silken cocoons and emerge as adults. The maturation process typically takes three to four weeks, depending on the weather and host availability.

Human flea bites often leave small red itchy marks on hosts when they feed. Some people are more sensitive to flea bites than others. The anticoagulant in human flea saliva can cause severe itching or a rash. Scratching flea bites can lead to secondary infections.

Pulex irritans is capable of spreading the Yersinia pestis bacteria from mice to humans. This bacterium causes bubonic plague, a serious disease that killed an estimated 200 million people during the 14th century in a pandemic called the Black Death. Plague outbreaks were still occurring in 2011, but antibiotics have greatly improved the survival rate of infected patients.

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