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Are your pets ready for Spring? |
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Page 1 of 3 Fleas, Ticks and Snakes
Now is the time to begin flea control if you haven't already continued through winter.....
Here is some flea information (courtesy Bayer ):
All You Wanted to Know About Fleas and More
You know that fleas can "bug" you and your pet. But did you know fleas have quite a unique history and lifestyle too? Come along as we explore the "flea" facts about the number one pest "bugging" your pet..... brought to you by Advantage® flea control, the flea's number one enemy.
- Some fleas can jump 150 times their own length. That compares to a human jumping 1,000 feet. One flea broke a record with a four-foot vertical jump.
- Undisturbed and without a blood meal, a flea can live more than 100 days. On average, they live two to three months.
- Female fleas cannot lay eggs until after their first blood meal and begin to lay eggs within 36-48 hours after that meal.
- The female flea can lay 2,000 eggs in her lifetime; if all 53 million dogs in the U.S. each hosted a population of 60 fleas, we'd have more than six trillion flea eggs surrounding our pets. Laid end-to-end, those eggs would stretch around the world more than 76 times!
- The female flea consumes 15 times her own body weight in blood daily.
- While adult fleas all suck blood from a cat or dog or other mammal, their larvae live and feed on organic debris in the host animal's environment.
- Flea larvae are blind.
- If you happen to see one flea, there may be more than 100 offspring or adults looming nearby in furniture, corners, cracks, carpeting or on your pet.
- The cat flea, which infests both cats and dogs, is a tropical insect and cannot tolerate freezing temperatures for long periods of time. However, they are well adapted to indoor living.
- While there are more than 2,000 known species and subspecies of fleas, only one flea species -- the cat flea -- accounts for almost all the fleas found on cats and dogs.
Fleas are often confused with bedbugs, lice and ticks.
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