A new genus of flea and its five new species have been described in an article in the Journal of Medical Entomology.
Four of the species were collected on the island of Sulawesi and the
fifth was collected in the Indonesian province of West Papua on the
island of New Guinea. The discovery by David K. Mardon and Lance A.
Durden provides a window on the history, both prehistoric and recent, of
Indonesia and illustrates the importance of scientific collections.
According to Dr. Durden of Georgia Southern University, male flea
genitalia is arguably "the most complex genitalia of any organism and
consists of a bedazzling array of uniquely shaped plates, rods, and
spines that connect with the female of the same species during mating
like a three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle." It is this complex anatomy that
led to the discovery.The fleas described in their paper had certain genital features not found in any known genera, prompting the authors to define a new genus they named Musserellus in honor of Dr. Guy Musser, who collected some of the specimens in Sulawesi in the 1970s. The newly described species include Musserellus vanpeeneni, Musserellus wattsi, Musserellus whitei, Musserellus marshalread more
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