flea, common name for any of the small, wingless
insects of the order Siphonaptera. The adults of both sexes eat only blood and are all external parasites of mammals and birds. Fleas have hard bodies flattened from side to side and piercing and sucking mouthparts. Their legs are powerful and adapted for fast movement and jumping, enabling them to find new hosts as well as to escape quickly the attempts of the hosts to remove them. The adults can survive away from a host for several weeks without eating. Flea eggs are usually laid in dirt or in the nest of the host; the larvae feed on organic material and the feces of adult fleas.
Metamorphosis is complete; the larvae spin silken cocoons when ready to pupate. Many species are not specific to a particular host species, and cat and dog fleas, as well as the human flea of the warmer parts of Europe and Asia, attack humans. Certain rat fleas transmit
typhus and bubonic
plague to humans, and another species transmits
tularemia from rabbits. Fleas also transmit several species of
tapeworms that sometimes infest humans. The
chigoe is a flea. Water fleas and beach fleas are
crustaceans and not closely related to the insects. Fleas are classified in the phylum
Arthropoda, class Insecta, order Siphonaptera.
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