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Feline Basic Health
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Your Senior Cat
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Medicating Your Cat
Pre/Post Operation
Household Dangers
Travel Preparation
Ticks and Fleas
What are They?
About Fleas
About Ticks
Controlling Fleas & Ticks
When They Pick Your Pet
Facts

Ticks and Fleas

About Fleas

FleaAdult fleas are wingless insects, generally smaller than a sesame seed, who feed on the blood of animals. Their proportionately enlarged back pair of legs gives them an extraordinary jumping ability. Hanging on to your pet's fur with their claws, their needle-like mouth parts bite through the skin to suck up blood - in quantities of up to 15 times their body weight daily in the case of female cat fleas. 

If one flea finds your cat an attractive food source, you can be sure that other fleas will, too! They mate, with females laying 30-50 eggs per day. These eggs will drop to the ground within 8 hours and, as soon as 2 days later, flea larvae will hatch and hide in dark places on the ground, in carpets or upholstery. After about a week of feeding on adult flea droppings, crumbs, flakes of skin, etc., the larvae spin cocoons to become pupae. The pupae can remain in this stage for very long periods of time. The cycle continues when, as soon as a week or so later, the pupae develop into adult fleas and emerge from their cocoons when they sense that a cat or dog, or other animal host, is near. The cycle - which can take as little as 12 days or as long as 180 days - can then begin again.