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FRONTLINE PLUS provides long-lasting, effective control of fleas and ticks on your Dog. FRONTLINE PLUS contains a special ingredient that kills flea eggs and larvae and keeps all stages of fleas from developing. It effectively stops the development of new fleas, FRONTLINE PLUS completely breaks the flea life cycle and more... | ||||
Advantage Flea Control is very active and quick reliever. It stops fleas from biting within 3-5 minutes. Advantage kills 98-100% of fleas within 12- hours of application. It kills the fleas before laying eggs. The effect of one application of Advantage lasts for one month during which it kills all the re-infesting fleas within two hours. So its one treatment provides a complete relief from flea for one month more... | ||||
K9 ADVANTIX Is topical prevention and treatment of ticks, fleas, and mosquitoes for monthly use on dogs and puppies 7 weeks of age and older weighing 1-10 Lbs. * Repels and kills ticks including Deer ticks (vector of Lyme disease), American dog ticks (vector of Rocky Mountain Spotted fever), Brown dog ticks (vector of ehrlichiosis), and Lone Star ticks for up to four weeks * Kills 98-100% of the fleas on dogs within 12 hours more... | ||||
Capstar Flea Control is a safe and fast acting treatment of fleas. It begins work less than 30 minutes. You can safely use in dogs, puppies, cats and kittens 4 weeks of age and older and 2 pounds and over weight. Capstar is also safe for pregnant or breeding animals more... | ||||
Program Flea Control for dogs and puppies comes in the form of Flavor Tablets. Program Flea Control works by preventing flea larvae and pupae (eggs) from developing more...
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Epi Otic Ear Cleaner A non-irritating ear cleanser with anti-adhesive properties to prevent microbial attachment for chronic otitis externa. Also has a patented anti-odor technology to eliminate ear canal odor. Contains 0.2% Salicylic Acid. Available in 4 oz. more...
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| C.E.T. Home Dental Care combines the renowned antiseptic activity of 0.12% chlorhexidine and zinc gluconate and may be used with or without brushing. It also contains cetylpyridinium chloride for fresh breath fast. A unique more... | ||||
| DASUQUIN: New Breed of Joint Health supplement in a tasty chewable tablet form from Nutramax Labs. The combination of trade marked FCHG49 Glucosamine hydrochloride and TRH122 low molecular weight chondroitin sulphate supports cartilage production and helps block enzymes in joints that break down cartilage. These ingredients together have shown in published studies to protect joint cartilage better than either ingredient alone. A Better than additive effect known as Synergistic effect on cartilage cells more... | ||||
Flea Information & Flea Control
Adult fleas are not only a nuisance to humans and their pets, but can cause medical problems including flea allergy dermatitis (FAD), tapeworms, secondary skin irritations and, in extreme cases, anemia. Although flea bites are rarely felt, it is the resulting irritation caused by the flea salivary secretions that varies among individuals. Some may witness a severe reaction (general rash or inflammation) resulting in secondary infections caused by scratching the irritated skin area. Others may show no reaction or irritation acquired after repeated flea bites over several weeks or months. Most flea bites usually found on the ankles and legs may cause pain lasting a few minutes, hours or days depending on one's sensitivity. The typical reaction to the bite is the formation of a small, hard, red, slightly-raised (swollen) itching spot. There is a single puncture point in the center of each spot. (Ants and spiders leave two marks when they bite. Mosquitoes, bees, wasps and bedbugs cause a large swelling or welt). Also, fleas may transmit bubonic plague from rodent to rodent and from rodent to humans. Oriental rat fleas can transmit murine typhus (endemic typhus) fever among rats and from rats to humans. Tapeworms normally infest dogs and cats but may appear in children if parts of infested fleas are accidentally consumed.
Identification of Fleas
Adult fleas are about 1/16 to 1/8-inch long, dark reddish-brown, wingless, hard-bodied (difficult to crush between fingers), have three pairs of legs (hind legs enlarged enabling jumping) and are flattened vertically or side to side (bluegill or sunfish-like) allowing easy movement between the hair, fur or feathers of the host. Fleas are excellent jumpers, leaping vertically up to seven inches and horizontally thirteen inches. (An equivalent hop for a human would be 250 feet vertically and 450 feet horizontally.) They have piercing-sucking mouthparts and spines on the body projecting backward. Also, there is a row of spines on the face known as a genal comb. Spine I (first outer spine) is shorter than Spine II (next inner spine) in dog fleas. Both spines are about the same length in the cat flea. The rabbit flea has a vertical genal comb with blunt spines. The genal comb is absent in both rat fleas. Eggs are smooth, oval and white. Larvae are 1/4-inch long, slender, straw-colored, brown headed, wormlike, bristly-haired creatures (13 body segments), that are legless, have chewing mouthparts, are active, and avoid light. Pupae are enclosed in silken cocoons covered with particles of debris.
Fleas Life Cycle and Habits
Fleas pass through a complete life cycle consisting of egg, larva, pupa and adult. A typical flea population consists of 50 percent eggs, 35 percent larvae, 10 percent pupae and 5 percent adults. Completion of the life cycle from egg to adult varies from two weeks to eight months depending on the temperature, humidity, food, and species. Normally after a blood meal, the female flea lays about 15 to 20 eggs per day up to 600 in a lifetime usually on the host (dogs, cats, rats, rabbits, mice, squirrels, chipmunks, raccoons, opossums, foxes, chickens, humans, etc.). Eggs loosely laid in the hair coat, drop out most anywhere especially where the host rests, sleeps or nests (rugs, carpets, upholstered furniture, cat or dog boxes, kennels, sand boxes, etc.). Eggs hatch in two days to two weeks into larvae found indoors in floor cracks & crevices, along baseboards, under rug edges and in furniture or beds. Outdoor development occurs in sandy gravel soils (moist sand boxes, dirt crawlspace under the house, under shrubs, etc.) where the pet may rest or sleep. Sand and gravel are very suitable for larval development which is the reason fleas are erroneously called "sand fleas." Larvae are blind, avoid light, pass through three larval instars and take a week to several months to develop. Their food consists of digested blood from adult flea feces, dead skin, hair, feathers, and other organic debris. (Larvae do not suck blood.) Pupa mature to adulthood within a silken cocoon woven by the larva to which pet hair, carpet fiber, dust, grass cuttings, and other debris adheres. In about five to fourteen days, adult fleas emerge or may remain resting in the cocoon until the detection of vibration (pet and people movement), pressure (host animal lying down on them), heat, noise, or carbon dioxide (meaning a potential blood source is near). Most fleas overwinter in the larval or pupal stage with survival and growth best during warm, moist winters and spring.
Adult fleas cannot survive or lay eggs without a blood meal, but may live from two months to one year without feeding. There is often a desperate need for flea control after a family has returned from a long vacation. The house has been empty with no cat or dog around for fleas to feed on. When the family and pets are gone, flea eggs hatch and larvae pupate. The adult fleas fully developed inside the pupal cocoon remains in a kind of "limbo" for a long time until a blood source is near. The family returning from vacation is immediately attacked by waiting hungry hordes of fleas. (In just 30 days, 10 female fleas under ideal conditions can multiply to over a quarter million different life stages.) Newly emerged adult fleas live only about one week if a blood meal is not obtained. However, completely developed adult fleas can live for several months without eating, so long as they do not emerge from their puparia. Optimum temperatures for the flea's life cycle are 70°F to 85°F and optimum humidity is 70 percent.
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