Miarinjara Adelaide, Raveloson Annick Onimalala, Rajaonarimanana Mandimby, Ayala Diego, Girod Romain, Gillespie Thomas Robert
Departments of Environmental Sciences and Environmental Health, Emory University and Rollins School of Public Health, Atlanta, USA.
University of Antananarivo, Antananarivo, Madagascar.
Parasit Vectors. 2025 Aug 27;18(1):363. doi: 10.1186/s13071-025-07001-9.
Colonizing fleas under laboratory conditions is a crucial step to studying their biology, conducting bioassays, and evaluating their ability to transmit pathogens. Starting a colony implies collecting and maintaining wild-caught specimens to obtain the next generations. Here we describe methods to collect, safely transport, and maintain adult and immature stages, and for the first time, to produce viable next generations of Pulex irritans, the human flea in the insectary.
Adult fleas were collected using human landing catches, while immature stages were obtained using the Berlese-Tullgren method. Blood feeding was performed using an artificial feeding device and the survival of adult fleas maintained on human or sheep blood was assessed.
More than 200 F0 adults survived and produced eggs for approximately 6 weeks, with an average lifespan of 6 days for males and 10 days for females. Pupation occurred around 10 days after arrival in the laboratory, yielding more than 900 cocoons within 8 weeks, with an emergence rate of approximately 80%. Challenges included high mortality among F1 adults, with both sexes surviving an average of 7 days. Although blood source assay was inconclusive, fleas were maintained on human blood. Factors that may have contributed to the low survival of F1 are discussed.
This study provides a foundational framework for laboratory-based research on P. irritans and its role in vector-borne disease transmission. While further studies are needed to establish a sustainable laboratory colony, we demonstrate that a substantial F1 population can be obtained within 3 weeks of laboratory rearing, enabling experimental studies on this species.
在实验室条件下饲养跳蚤是研究其生物学特性、进行生物测定以及评估其传播病原体能力的关键步骤。建立一个跳蚤种群意味着收集并饲养野外捕获的标本以繁殖下一代。在此,我们描述了收集、安全运输和饲养成年跳蚤及幼虫阶段的方法,并且首次在昆虫饲养室中培育出了能繁殖后代的人蚤(致痒蚤)。
使用人诱捕法收集成年跳蚤,而幼虫阶段则通过贝氏漏斗法获得。使用人工喂食装置进行血液喂养,并评估以人血或羊血饲养的成年跳蚤的存活率。
200多只F0代成年跳蚤存活并产卵约6周,雄性平均寿命为6天,雌性为10天。到达实验室约10天后化蛹,8周内产生了900多个茧,羽化率约为80%。面临的挑战包括F1代成年跳蚤死亡率高,两性平均存活7天。尽管血液来源试验尚无定论,但跳蚤以人血饲养。讨论了可能导致F1代存活率低的因素。
本研究为基于实验室的致痒蚤研究及其在媒介传播疾病传播中的作用提供了一个基础框架。虽然需要进一步研究以建立一个可持续的实验室种群,但我们证明在实验室饲养3周内可以获得大量的F1代种群,从而能够对该物种进行实验研究。