Fleas


Life Cycle: Flea eggs are small and white. Generally, after several weeks the eggs drop off and hatch into tiny, hairy, worm-like larvae. The larvae are usually found where the animal sleeps, along baseboards, in carpets, or on furniture. Pupa mature to adulthood within a cocoon woven by the larva to which dust, pet hair, carpet fibers, and other debris adhere. After about five to fourteen days adult fleas emerge from the cocoon. Female fleas lay up to twenty eggs per day and six-hundred in a lifetime. Although fleas can live up to two months or one year without eating, they cannot survive or lay eggs without blood. Newly emerged adult fleas live only about one week if a blood meal is not obtained. People may be bitten by fleas, especially when populations are high, but fleas will not live and reproduce on humans.