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      Blood-feeding of Tunga penetrans males.

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          Abstract

          The jigger Tunga penetrans (Linnaeus, 1758: type-species of the family Tungidae) is the smallest known species of flea (Siphonaptera), causing serious ectoparasitosis of humans and domestic animals. The adult female Tunga lodges in the epidermis of the mammalian host, grows by neosomy, becomes gravid and expels eggs. Relatively little is known about the free-living male Tunga adults. Among impoverished communities of Fortaleza in north-east Brazil, we observed T. penetrans males as well as females penetrating the skin of human hosts. After penetrating the epidermis for a few hours, evidently for capillary feeding from the dermis, males withdrew their mouthparts and crawled away, whereas the females remained completely embedded, hypertrophying to become gravid, eventually dying in situ after oviposition. Caged rats were placed on the sandy soil and examined periodically for Tunga infestation. On five rats we obtained 140 females embedded and we detected 75 males biting, with rat erythrocytes observed in the proventriculus and midgut of all five males dissected and examined microscopically. This confirms that T. penetrans males are hamatophagous ectoparasites of mammals.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Med. Vet. Entomol.
          Medical and veterinary entomology
          Wiley-Blackwell
          0269-283X
          0269-283X
          Dec 2004
          : 18
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology of Infection, Institute for Infection Medicine, Charité Medical School, Campus Benjamin Franklin, Berlin, Germany.
          Article
          MVE533
          10.1111/j.0269-283X.2004.00533.x
          15642011
          ab24b06c-d6e0-4239-a64c-8a10fcf60c01
          History

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