Arthropoda
The flea genus is the genus of a flea
No. A cat is a mammal, belonging to the phylum Chordata, not Arthropoda. Arthropods are animals such as insects, arachnids and crustaceans, with an exoskeleton and jointed legs. If you meant 'cat flea', yes, those are insects and thereby arthropods. ^^
No, a flea is a flea. There is no "cat flea" or "dog flea". Its just a flea and its just as likely to get a cat or dog.
There is no such thing as a "cow flea". However, there are several other species of fleas that actually exist.Cat Flea: Ctenocephalides felisDog Flea: Ctenocephalides canisHuman Flea: Pulex irritansNorthern Rat Flea: Nosopsyllus fasciatusOriental Rat Flea: Xenopsylla cheopis
Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata
An unborn flea- the embryo of a flea that has not yet hatched.
a flea
The classification of a flea can be broken down into several hierarchical levels: Domain (Eukarya), Kingdom (Animalia), Phylum (Arthropoda), Class (Insecta), Order (Siphonaptera), Family (Pulicidae), Genus (Pulex), and Species (Pulex irritans, for example). Fleas are small, wingless insects known for their ability to jump and their parasitic lifestyle, feeding on the blood of mammals and birds.
monkey can have flea's but flea cannot have monkey..hahah
wee flea leetle beetle
The flea associated with the Black Death is the Oriental rat flea. There is a link below to an article on this flea.
Fleas are insects, and all insects are invertebrates. They have an exoskeleton, with no backbone or spinal cord. They belong to the Phylum Arthropoda, which includes organisms such as insects, spiders, centipedes and millipedes, and crustaceans. Vertebrates include only some members of the Phylum Chordata: specifically, mammals, birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians.