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Top 100 Questions and Answers about Fleas and Pets
Top 100 Questions and Answers about Fleas and Pets
Top 100 Questions and Answers about Fleas and Pets
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Top 100 Questions and Answers about Fleas and Pets

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If a pet has a flea problem, you're probably trying to solve it. Unfortunately, flea infestations are very difficult to eliminate!

Thankfully, we now know more about the biology and treatment of fleas than ever before, which has led to safe, effective, and affordable treatments, both on pets and in the home environment. This book provides an easy introduction to fleas for pet owners and the veterinary professionals advising them, to help effectively prevent, control and treat infestations. Detailing the most effective treatment and prevention options, the book:

Provides accessible and easy to understand information as commonly asked questions and answers.
Describes the changes in animal and human health when flea infestations occur.
Includes practical advice pitched at a level for both owners and veterinary nurses.

Top 100 Question and Answers About Fleas covers all the important facts you need to know about fleas in an easy question and answer format. Informative and interesting, it is an invaluable aid in your quest to provide the best quality of life to beloved pets.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 2, 2019
ISBN9781789245479
Top 100 Questions and Answers about Fleas and Pets
Author

Hany Elsheikha

Hany Elsheikha is an Associate Professor of Veterinary Parasitology at the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, University of Nottingham. He earned his PhD in Molecular and Evolutionary Parasitology from Michigan State University, where he studied the genetic population structure of the protozoan Sarcocystis neurona, the agent of equine protozoal myeloencephalitis in the Americas. In 2005, he was awarded the National Center for Infectious Diseases (NCID), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Postdoctoral Fellowship. He is the author of more than 250 research and professional articles on parasite pathobiology and control. Hany is the author of one US patent and three textbooks. Also, he is a diplomate of the European Veterinary Parasitology College (EVPC), a member of the European Scientific Counsel of Companion Animal Parasites (ESCCAP) UK & Ireland, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Public Health (RSPH) and a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (HEA). From 2014 to 2015, Hany was the inaugural Specialty Chief Editor of Parasitology in the journal Frontiers in Veterinary Science . He serves on the Editorial Board of five peer-reviewed journals and as Reviewer of several journals and national and international funding agencies. Since 2007 he has been at the University of Nottingham, where he established the veterinary parasitology curriculum from its inception. Hany is also a veterinarian by training; he obtained a first-class degree with distinction in Veterinary Sciences and MSc in Veterinary Parasitology from Cairo University. His research focuses on host-parasite interaction and anti-parasitic drug discovery.

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    Top 100 Questions and Answers about Fleas and Pets - Hany Elsheikha

    Preface

    Fleas Are More Than Just an Itchy Nuisance! Dog and cat fleas may cause intense itching and induce allergic reactions in susceptible animals, and they also bite pet owners. This is true! Humans can get flea bites. Fleas will live in human hair, but you’ll find their bites on your arms and legs, around the waist, ankles, armpits, and in the bend of elbows and knees. The book is designed to be used as a companion to every pet lover in order to enrich their ability to protect their beloved pets against the many diseases that fleas carry and transmit. This book would be also useful as a reference for veterinary nurses.

    This book is written with the goal that the more you know about fleas, the more likely you will be able to get them under control or get rid of them completely. If you have a flea problem, you’re probably trying to solve it. However, fleas are very tough to get rid of. They’re resilient little critters. Fortunately, we now know more about the biology and treatment of flea infestation than before and that has led to safe, effective and relatively affordable preventatives and treatments. This book provides an easy introduction to the world of fleas and describes the changes in animal and human health that occur when fleas attack us and our beloved pets. The most effective ways that fleas can be treated and prevented are also explained.

    This first edition of the Top 100 Questions and Answers about Fleas and Pets provides a full coverage of the most important facts that people need to know about fleas in an easy question and answer format. The book has been deliberately written in lay language that suits individuals from all various levels of background and knowledge about fleas. It is hoped that pet owners using the book will find it informative and interesting, as well as an invaluable aid in their quest to provide the best quality of life to their beloved pets.

    Hany M. Elsheikha, Ian Wright and

    Michael W. Dryden

    1 Basics of Fleas

    1. What are fleas?

    Fleas are blood-sucking insects (parasites), which live in close proximity to their hosts and the surrounding environment. In the case of fleas infesting dogs and cats, this behaviour can cause severe domestic household infestations. Flea bites can be incredibly itchy, but each animal or human may react differently to the bites. Pets may get fleas from other animals or people bringing them into the home or newly emerged fleas jumping on to the pet while they are outside.

    2. What do fleas look like? How big are they?

    Fleas are small (2–5 mm or 1/16–1/8 in), wingless insects that feed on dogs, cats and many other animals. Adult fleas seen on pets are glossy brown/black in colour, flattened from side to side, and have six legs (Fig. 1.1). They have a set of hairs called combs at the junction of the head and thorax (pronotal comb) and near the mouthparts (genal or oral comb).

    Fig. 1.1 General flea morphology.

    3. Do all fleas look the same?

    No. While to the naked eye they may look similar, the morphology when viewed under a microscope varies in different species (rabbit fleas, rodent and bird fleas), for example, which may occasionally be found on cats and dogs; fleas’ identification can be important therefore in control programmes advised by vets and nurses for flea-infested households (Fig. 1.2).

    Fig. 1.2 Different types of fleas. (a) A sticktight flea (Echidnophaga gallinacea) of poultry, (b) Pulex irritans, the human flea and (c) Xenopsylla cheopis, a rodent flea.

    4. How many species of fleas exist? Which are the most common ones?

    Flea infestations are probably the most common ectoparasites of dogs and cats. More than 2,500 species of fleas are known throughout the world. The common household flea is Ctenocephalides felis. The common name for this is the cat flea but you will also find this species on dogs, various wild mammals and even some birds. That said, rabbit fleas, while not persistently residing on the pet, are seen regularly in practice, as are household bird flea infestations.

    5. If Ctenocephalides felis is also found on dogs, why is it called the cat flea?

    Well, way back in 1835 this flea species was removed from a cat in France and described in the literature for the first time. The describing author (Bouché) gave it the species name felis simply because it was removed from a cat. He could have just as easily removed one from a dog, red fox or lynx in France back then and today we might be calling it the dog flea, fox flea

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