125 million-year-old sneaky flea dined on flying reptiles

The Saurophthyrus exquisitus flea dined on the blood of pterosaurs, or flying reptiles, about 125 million years ago. (Chungkun Shih)

A 125-million-year-old fossil flea has been unearthed in China.

The ancient parasite, described on Thursday in the journal Current Biology, had a mouth and body smaller than older fleas, but larger than modern-day pests. The new species, Saurophthyrus exquisitus, may be a transitional species that could shed light on why modern-day bloodsucking parasites evolved to become smaller and take dainty, unobtrusive bites.

Ancient pests
Last year, Chungkun Shih, a visting professor at Capital Normal University in Beijing, and his colleagues discovered the oldest known flea. The ancient parasites, known as Pseudopulicidae, were unearthed in 165-million-year-old sediments in northeastern China.

Pseudopulicidae had huge, 0.8 inch-long bodies with long tubes for sucking blood and sharp, sawlike teeth. The males also had completely external genitalia. Those ancient pests likely fed on the blood of thick-skinned, feathered dinosaurs that lived during the Jurassic Period. [Dinosaur Fleas! Photos of Paleo Pests]

"The flea needed to cut through the thick skin to get to the blood, and they could do that harm without the host knowing it," Shih told LiveScience.

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By contrast, modern-day fleas have bodies that are five to 10 times smaller, and have much smaller mouths, completely hidden genitals and longer legs for jumping.

In-between species
Shih and his colleagues were excavating in the same region when they uncovered three specimens of the new species, Sauropthyrus exquisitus. The ancient pest had a body size in between the oldest and modern-day fleas, growing up to 0.4 inches long. It also sported partially hidden genitalia, and a thin, relatively small sucking tube for drawing blood; it also lacked the fierce teeth of its older relative.

In addition, the new species had longer legs and short, stiff bristles on its body.

The researchers hypothesize that fleas originally evolved to feast on thick-skinned dinosaurs, so piercing the skin was the main challenge.

But as dinosaurs evolved, so did their parasites. The pterosaurs, or flying reptiles, that lived in the same region during that Cretaceous Era had much thinner skins. As a result, Sauropthyrus exquisitus adapted to deliver less painful bites, "so they would be harder to detect by the host," Shih said.

The bristles on its body may have helped the paleo pest cling to hairs on an animal's body to hide. And the longer legs and partially internal genitalia may also have enabled greater jumping ability, Shih said.

"You can imagine if you have something sticking out, it's hard to move around," Shih said, referring to the genitalia.

The new discovery suggests the parasites co-evolved with their hosts in a way to balance their bloodsucking and hiding abilities. Mammals have even thinner, more sensitive skin than pterosaurs, which makes the ability of fleas to take dainty, unobtrusive sips and jump away from a deadly swat especially important, Shih said.

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