Scientific News Biology The theories and researches of life CAT FLEAS' JOURNEY INTO THE VACUUM IS A 'ONE-WAY TRIP'
CAT FLEAS' JOURNEY
INTO THE VACUUM IS A 'ONE-WAY TRIP'
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Glen Needha |
COLUMBUS , Ohio – Homeowners dogged by
household fleas need look no farther than the broom closet to solve their
problem. Scientists have determined that vacuuming kills fleas in all stages of
their lives, with an average of 96 percent success in adult fleas and 100
percent destruction of younger fleas.
In fact, the results were so surprisingly
definitive that the lead scientist, an Ohio State University insect specialist,
repeated the experiments several times to be sure the findings were correct. The
studies were conducted on the cat flea, or Ctenocephalides
felis, the most common type of flea plaguing companion
animals and humans.
The lead researcher also examined vacuum bags for
toxicity and exposed fleas to churning air in separate tests to further explore
potential causes of flea death. He and a colleague believed that the damaging
effects of the brushes, fans and powerful air currents in vacuum cleaners
combine to kill the fleas. The study used a single model of an upright vacuum,
but researchers don't think the vacuum design has much bearing on the results.
“No matter what vacuum a flea gets sucked into,
it's probably a one-way trip,” said Glen
Needham, associate professor of entomology
at Ohio State and a co-author of the study.
The results are published in a recent issue of
the journal Entomologia
Experimentalis et Applicata.
Needham theorized that the vacuum brushes wear
away the cuticle, a waxy outer later on fleas and most insects that allows the
bugs to stay hydrated. Without the waxy protection, the adult fleas. larvae and
pupae probably dry up and die, he said.
“We didn't do a post-mortem, so we don't know
for sure. But it appears that the physical abuse they took caused them to perish,”
he said.
Conventional wisdom has suggested for years that
homeowners should vacuum carpeted areas to physically remove fleas, and some
recommendations went so far as to say the contents of the bags should be emptied,
burned or frozen.
Lead study author W. Fred Hink, professor
emeritus of entomology at Ohio State and a longtime researcher in nontoxic
controls of fleas on dogs, sought to test the effects of vacuuming on all flea
life stages and whether any extra disposal steps or additional chemical controls
are necessary.
Fleas have multiple life stages. Adult fleas eat
blood meals and mate while living on a host animal. Females lay eggs, which roll
off of the animal and onto the floor, furniture or pet bedding. After hatching
from the eggs two to 14 days later, the insects go through three larval stages,
the last of which spins a cocoon to protect the pupa stage. New adults typically
emerge within a week or two.
The study involved groups of 100 adult fleas at a
time, as well as groups of 50 pupae and 50 larvae, by vacuuming them up from a
tightly woven kitchen-type of carpet. Six tests of vacuuming the adult fleas
yielded an average of 96 percent of fleas killed; three tests of vacuumed pupae
and one test of vacuumed larvae (in their third stage of development) resulted
in 100 percent killed.
In comparison, an average of only 5 percent of
adult fleas died after being held in paper vacuum bags to test for toxicity, and
an average of only 3 percent died when circulated in moving air.
“I did not include eggs in the vacuum study,
but I'm sure they would not have survived,” Hink said.
Flea survival in general is on the wane these
days, Needham noted, because of numerous effective chemical treatments on the
market that kill fleas on companion animals.
“For awhile, fleas owned us. But now they're on
the run,” Needham said. “There are all kinds of ways to manage the problem,
but how people feel about insecticides and how much money they want to spend
factors into what they're going to do for flea control. Vacuuming is a great
strategy because it involves no chemicals and physically removes the problem.”
He also said the effectiveness of some
insecticides is likely to decrease as fleas inevitably develop resistance to the
currently available compounds. Because of that, Needham is among researchers
seeking other nontoxic ways to kill fleas and other household pests, including
studying the use of ultraviolet light.
“We're hoping to find that exposure to UV light
could knock the flea population down even further. It appears to be a pretty
powerful technology for this purpose,” he said.
The vacuum study was partially funded by the Royal
Appliance Manufacturing Co.
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Contact: Glen Needham, 614-688-3026; Needham.1@osu.edu
or
W. Fred Hink, 480-575-1889; wfhink3@aol.com
Written by Emily Caldwell, 614-292-8310; Caldwell.151@osu.edu
Publishing date: January 7, 2008
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