Arthopods Flashcards

1
Q

Dioecious

A

Separate sexes
Male implants sperm
Female lays eggs

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2
Q

Mallophagan

A

(Biting) bite at skin, hair and feathers of host

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2
Q

Mallophagan

A

(Biting) bite at skin, hair and feathers of host

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3
Q

Anopluran

A

(Sucking): Feed on blood of host

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4
Q

characteristics of Mallophaga

A
  • Antennae
  • Head vs. Thorax (Capitulum)
    Head is wider than widest part of thorax
  • Legs
    3 pairs of legs
    Front legs often tucked under head
  • Tarsal Claws
    Claw at the end of the leg
    Often a single simple claw
  • Abdomen (Idiosoma)
    Spiracles & chitinous pigmented bars on each segment.
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5
Q

characteristics of Anoplura

A
  • Antennae
    Sensory Appendages
  • Head vs. Thorax
    Head is narrower than widest part of thorax
  • Legs
    3 pairs of legs
  • Simple claws
    Claw with a simple hook
    Compound Claws
    Claw at the end of the leg
    Complex claw with an end hook and ‘grasping thumb’
  • Abdomen
    Rows of hairs on each segment
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6
Q

Fleas

A

*Ctenocephalides felis *- cat but is common
* host to host
* Cause for kitten
flea (bite) anemia
* Intermediate host
*Dipylidium caninum
Bartonellosis (Bartonella spp.)

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7
Q

stages of fleas

A
  1. Adult
  2. Egg
  3. Larval
  4. Pupal
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8
Q

Burrowing mites

A

*Sarcoptes scabei

Notoedres cati*

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9
Q

Scabies
Signs: Scaling, crusting, rashes: Ears, lateral elbows, ventral abdomen
Pinnal-pedal response: rubbing tip of pinnae will elicit ipsilateral hindleg scratching response
VERY ZOONOTIC (canis form)
Diagnosis: Skin scraping

A

Sarcoptes scabei

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10
Q

Common Name: Notoedric mange mite of cats or feline scabies mite
Host: Felines and occasionally rabbits
Location of Adult: Most of its life cycle, the adult is found tunneling in the superficial layers of the epidermis, but for a short period of its life cycle, it can be found on the surface of the skin around the ear pinna, face, neck, and feet of the cat

A

Notoedres cati

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11
Q

Common name: ear mites
Host: Canines, felines, and ferrets
Location of Adult: External ear canal
spread by direct contact
can cause otitis

A

Otodectes cynotis

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12
Q

Common name: Rabbit ear mite
No zoonotic potential
Appearance: ear canal packed with corn flakes
Signs: shaking head, scratching at head and ears
Diagnosis: skin scraping, sampling of ear crusts

A

Psoroptes cuniculi

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13
Q

Common Name: Red mange mite, follicular mite, canine follicular mite, or demodectic mange mite
Host: Domestic animals and humans (host specific)
Location of Adult: Hair follicles and sebaceous glands of the skin

A

Demodex canis

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14
Q

Nasal mite of dogs
Direct contact from host to host
Signs: reddened nasal mucosa, sneezing, shaking head, rubbing nose, labored breathing, asthma, fainting

A

Pneumonyssus caninum

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15
Q

Walking dandruff”
Non-burrowing- reside in keratin layer of skin
direct host to host contact

A

Cheyletiella parasitovorax

16
Q

Argasid

A

SOFT ticks
Mainly infest large animals
No SCUTUM

17
Q

Ixodid

A

HARD ticks
SCUTUM – hard chitinous material covering the body

18
Q

Common Name: Deer tick, or Black-legged tick
Host: Dogs, Humans
Live in vegetation and wait to attach to host
Location: Ohio river valley/Eastern United States
Vector for:
Babesia microti (protozoan)
Tularemia (rabbit fever, bacterial infection)
Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme – bacteria)
Ehrlichiosis (anaplasma infection – bacteria)

A

Ixodes scapularis

19
Q

Common Name: Brown dog tick
Host: Dogs only
Location: Widely distributed throughout North America
Vector for:
Babesia canis

A

Rhipicephalus sanguineus

20
Q

American Dog tick
Host: Dogs and Humans
Location: Eastern 2/3 of U.S.
Vector for:
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever
Primary vector: D. Andersoni
Tularemia (zoonotic)
D. variabilis, D. occidentalis

A

Dermacentor spp.;
D. variabilis

21
Q

Common Name: Lone star tick
White spot on scutum
Location: Southern US and Midwest/Atlantic
Vector for:
RMSF and Tularemia

A

Amblyomma americanum