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Hystrichopsylla schefferi

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Kingdom
  
Superorder
  
Endopterygota

Family
  
Hystrichopsyllidae

Phylum
  
Order
  
Flea

Infraclass
  
Neoptera

Infraorder
  
Hystrichopsyllamorpha

Genus
  
Hystrichopsylla

Rank
  
Species

Subclass
  
Pterygota

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People also search for
  
Flea, Hystrichopsyllidae, Peromyscopsylla

Hystrichopsylla schefferi top 5 facts


Hystrichopsylla schefferi, also known as the mountain beaver flea and giant mountain beaver flea, is a parasitic holarctic insect belonging to the order Siphonaptera, the "siphon-wingless" (fleas). With an adult body length of as much as 0.5 inches (13 mm), it is the largest living flea in the world, and is native to the American Northwest. Though most members of the genus Hystrichopsylla are not strongly associated with any particular host animal and will parasitize insectivores and rodents generally, H. schefferi is monoxenously associated with the mountain beaver with which its range is coterminous. The fleas of the family Hystrichopsyllidae, along with the family Pulicidae, are the oldest of fleas in evolutionary history. H. schefferi can be distinguished from the very similar and closely related species Hystrichopsylla gigas dippiei by the number of spines in the pronotal comb, as H. g. dippiei has 36 and H. schefferi has 46.

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Hystrichopsylla schefferi top 5 facts


References

Hystrichopsylla schefferi Wikipedia


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