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      Host grooming efficiency for regulation of cat flea (Siphonaptera: Pulicidae) populations.

      Journal of Medical Entomology
      Animals, Cats, parasitology, Eating, Feces, Female, Grooming, Male, Sex Ratio, Siphonaptera

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          Abstract

          Grooming efficiency was studied by infesting domestic short-hair cats, Felis catus L., with known numbers of cat fleas, Ctenocephalides felis felis Bouché, then collecting the cat feces and extracting the fleas to determine how many had been groomed off, varying the infestation level. Some hosts were found to be significantly more efficient at grooming fleas than others, with the best groomer removing 17.6% of its flea burden daily, compared with only 4.1% removed by the poorest groomer. Cats were more efficient at grooming fleas at infestations of < 50 fleas and > 150 fleas. Mean on-host flea longevity was 7.8 d.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9615545
          10.1093/jmedent/35.3.266

          Chemistry
          Animals,Cats,parasitology,Eating,Feces,Female,Grooming,Male,Sex Ratio,Siphonaptera
          Chemistry
          Animals, Cats, parasitology, Eating, Feces, Female, Grooming, Male, Sex Ratio, Siphonaptera

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