| Detailed Fly Information
Introduction
Several kinds of non-biting flies can be found in and around farms, residences,
and food-handling establishments. These flies can be harmful to health, causing
annoyance and discomfort. All filth flies (Table 1 ) have an egg, larva (maggot), pupa, and adult stage
in their life cycle. The adult fly has 2 wings (the hind pair is reduced to
a knobbed balancing organ).
Filth flies are usually scavengers in nature and many are capable of transmitting
diseases to man. Filth flies can usually be grouped according to their habits
and appearance as: houseflies and their relatives; flesh flies, blow flies and
bottle flies, filter flies, soldier flies, and vinegar (fruit) flies.
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House Fly
The house fly, Musca domestica is one of the most common of all insects.
It is worldwide in distribution and is a pest in homes, barns, poultry houses,
food processing plants, dairies, and recreation areas. It has a tremendous breeding
potential and during the warmer months can produce a generation in less than
two weeks.
CREDITS: J. F. Butler, University of Florida
|
| Figure 1. House Fly. |
House fly eggs are laid in almost any type of warm organic material. Animal
or poultry manure is an excellent breeding medium. Fermenting vegetation such
as grass clippings and garbage can also provide a medium for fly breeding. The
whitish eggs, which are laid in clusters of 75-100, hatch within 24 hours into
tiny larvae or maggots. In 4 to 6 days the larvae migrate to drier portions
of the breeding medium and pupate. The pupa stage may vary in length considerably,
but in warm weather can be about three days. When the adult emerges from the
puparium, the wings are folded in tight pads.
The house fly crawls about rapidly while the wings unfold and the body dries
and hardens. Under normal conditions this may take as little as an hour. Mating
occurs immediately. A house fly may go through an entire life cycle; egg, larva,
pupa to winged adult in 6 to 10 days. An adult house fly may live an average
of 30 days. During warm weather 2 or more generations may be produced per month.
Because of this rapid rate of development and the large numbers of eggs produced
by the female, large populations build up.
House flies are strong fliers and can become widely distributed by flying,
wind currents, vehicles and animals. Generally, however, flies are abundant
in the immediate vicinity of their breeding site. Under certain conditions,
they may migrate 1 to 4 miles, but are usually limited to one-half to 2 miles.
House flies feed by using sponging type mouthparts. As the fly moves about
from one food source to another, it samples and eats its food by regurgitating
liquid and dropping it on the food to liquefy it. Light colored spots called
fly specks are visible signs of this type of feeding. Darker fly specks associated
with house flies are fecal spots.
The house fly's feeding and breeding habits along with its persistence for
invading homes and feeding on human food enable the house fly to spread many
intestinal diseases such as dysentery and diarrhea.
Resistance is a complex problem associated with chemical control of insects.
Recognized some 50 years ago, it is not a new problem. Defined, resistance is
the ability of an insect population to withstand exposure to insecticides, and
this is acquired by breeding from insects that have survived previous exposures
to an insecticide that did not wipe out the whole population. The surviving
insects are resistant because either biochemical mechanisms (enzymes) enable
them to quickly break down the insecticide or behavioristic adaptations enable
them to somehow avoid the insecticide.
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Stable
Flies
The stable fly or dog fly is a blood-sucking fly which is of considerable importance
to people, pets, agricultural animals, and the tourist industry in Florida.
Stable flies primarily attack animals for a blood meal, but in the absence of
an animal host will also bite man.
CREDITS: J. F. Butler, University of Florida |
Figure 2. Stable Fly. |
Adult stable flies can fly up to 70 miles from their breeding sites. The stable
fly adult is similar to the house fly in size and color. The stable fly, however,
has a long bayonet-like mouthpart for sucking blood. Unlike many other species
of flies, both male and female stable flies suck blood.
Stable fly bites are extremely painful to both man and animal. When hungry,
stable flies are quite persistent and will continue to pursue a blood meal even
after being swatted at several times. Although the bite is painful, there is
little irritation after the bite, and few people exhibit an allergic reaction
to stable fly bites.
Stable flies breed in three principal types of material:
- Green vegetation (e.g. green chop, silage, crop residues, and cut grass),
- Seaweed and Bay grass deposits and
- Animal manure.
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Flesh Flies
Flesh flies are a scavenger fly species that usually feeds on carrion or meat
scraps in garbage. They are medium- to large-sized flies and usually have 3
dark thoracic stripes and mottled abdomens. Many of the common species have
a red tip on the abdomen.

CREDITS: J. L. Castner, University of Florida |
Figure 3. Flesh Fly. |
Flesh flies retain their eggs within the body of the female until they are
ready to hatch. The larvae are deposited directly onto the food the immature
will be eating. The life cycle for the common species can be completed in 8
to 21 days.
The preferred breeding media around residences are decayed flesh, spoiling
meat, and manure. Usually garbage can meat scraps and dog food left outside
are abundant sources of flesh fly breeding. Flesh flies can breed in dead rodents
and birds in attics or wall voids of houses.
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Blow Flies and Bottle Flies
There are quite a few species of blow flies and bottle flies which are found
in and around residences. In urban areas these flies may be more abundant than
house flies.

CREDITS: J. F. Butler, University of Florida |
Figure 4. Blow Fly. |

CREDITS: J. F. Butler, University of Florida |
Figure 5. Green Bottle Fly. |
The blow flies and bottle flies usually have a metallic blue or green color
or both on the thorax and abdomen. These flies are strong fliers and range many
miles from breeding places. They are abundant during the warm summer months.
Blow flies and bottle flies can breed on dead rodents and birds in attics or
wall voids of houses. They usually breed in meat scraps, animal excrement, and
decaying animal matter around houses. The adult flies are quite active inside
and are strongly attracted to light. The mature larvae are often a problem when
they migrate from breeding areas to pupate.
Blow flies usually lay eggs on dead animals or decaying meat. Garbage cans
have been known to produce 30,000 blow flies in one week. The life cycle usually
lasts 9-21 days from egg to adult.
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Filter Flies or Moth Flies
Filter/moth flies, (drain flies), belong to the family of flies called moth
flies. They are 1/16 to 1/18 in in length; light gray to tan in color. Their
life cycle is 7 to 20 days. Adult flies have the body and wings covered with
dense, long hairs. Moth/filter flies breed in decomposing organic material,
such as moist plant litter, garbage, sewage, around kitchen or bathroom sinks
and water traps in plumbing fixtures.

CREDITS: J. L. Castner, University of Florida |
Figure 6. Moth Fly. |
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Soldier Flies
The soldier fly is a widespread pest which occasionally becomes a problem in
homes. The adult is a large fly about 1 inch long with 2 large translucent areas
on the abdomen. The fly behaves like a wasp and is similar in appearance to
a mud-dauber wasp. The larvae prefer to feed on human or animal excrement although
they have also been known to breed in honey bee colonies killed in walls of
houses.

CREDITS: J. F. Butler, University of Florida |
Figure 7. Soldier Fly. |
Most frequently the larvae are found in bathrooms migrating from the septic
tank or sewer line. The presence of the maggot under such circumstances indicates
the septic tank or sewage line is not working properly.
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Vinegar (Fruit) Fly
Fruit flies are nuisance pests and contaminators of food. Fruit flies usually
breed in fruit, dirty garbage containers, or slime in drains, feeding on yeasts
that grow on organic matter.

CREDITS: J. L. Castner, University of Florida |
| Figure 8.
Vinegar (Fruit) Fly. |
Each adult lays about 500 eggs which hatch and the larvae mature to adults
in 9-12 days. These flies are readily attracted to fruit, vegetables, and soda
bottles and cans.
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Eye Gnats
Eye gnats are small flies, shiny black about 1/6 inch in length. The adults
are strongly attracted to moisture around the eyes and nose of people outdoors.
In mid-summer large numbers of eye gnats persistently hover around the face
causing considerable annoyance. Often eye gnats enter the homes through open
doors or windows. They are strongly attracted to light and observed mainly on
windows in large numbers.
CREDITS: J. L. Castner, University of Florida |
Figure 9. Eye Gnat. |
Eye gnats breed in soil containing considerable organic matter, decaying vegetation,
and animal excrement. The life cycle varies from 7-28 days depending on the
temperature and moisture.
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Hump-Backed Flies
Hump-backed flies are about 1/8 inch long with a small head and large thorax,
causing the fly to have a hump-backed appearance.

CREDITS: J. L. Castner, University of Florida |
Figure 10. Hump-Backed Fly. |
Hump-backed flies breed in decaying vegetation, animal debris, garbage, and
in ant and termite nests.
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Dump Flies
Dump flies are about 1/4 inch long, black in color with a shiny thorax and
abdomen.

CREDITS: J. A. Hogsette, USDA |
| Figure 11.
Black Dump Fly. |
Dump flies breed in garbage and fowl excrement. The larvae are predacious on
larvae of other flies.
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Secondary Screwworm
Flies
Secondary screwworm flies are about 1/4 inch long, green in color, shiny abdomen
and thorax with thorax marked lengthwise with three dark stripes. Their life
cycle is 9 to 39 days.
CREDITS: J. L. Castner, University of Florida
|
| Figure 12.
Secondary Screwworm Fly. |
They breed in dead tissue surrounding wounds in animals, fresh cut meats, and
garbage.
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Tables
Descriptions of filth-breeding flies.
| Pests |
Description |
Breeding
Habits |
Life
Cycle |
| House Fly |
About 1/4" in length; dull gray
in color; thorax marked longitudinally with 4 dark stripes; abdomen pale
and fourth wing vein is angled. |
Warm organic material such as
animal and poultry manure, garbage, decaying vegetables and fruits and
in piles of moist leaves and lawn clippings. |
6 to 10 days |
| Green Bottle Fly |
About 1/2" in length with shiny
metallic blue-green abdomen and thorax. |
Dead animal carcasses; decomposing
meat and fish; garbage and some-times animal excrement. |
9 to 21 days |
| Bronze Bottle Fly |
About 1/2" in length with a
shiny bronze abdomen and thorax. |
Dead animal carcasses; decomposing
meat and fish, garbage and sometimes animal excrement. |
9 to 10 days |
| Blue Bottle Fly |
About 1/2" in length with a
dull thorax and shiny blue abdomen. |
Dead animal carcasses; decomposing
meat and fish, garbage, over-ripe fruit, decaying vegetable matter and
sores on living humans. |
15 to 20 days |
| Moth Flies or Filter Flies |
1/16" to 1/8" in length; light
gray to tan in color. |
Decomposing organic material
such as moist plant litter, garbage, sewage, around kitchen or bathroom
sinks and water traps in plumbing fixtures. |
7 to 20 days |
| Eye Gnats |
About 1/16" in length, shiny
black to dull gray in color with yellow or orange markings on the legs
and have small mouthparts and bare aristae on antennae. |
Loose soil containing con-siderable
organic material, decaying vegetation and animal excrement. |
7 to 28 days |
| Hump-backed Flies |
About 1/8" in length with a
small head and large thorax causing the fly to have a hump-backed appearance.
|
Decaying vegetation, animal
debris, garbage and in ant and termite nests. |
10 to 25 days |
| Blind Mosquitoes |
3/16" to 1/2" in length with
a slender body, large thorax, small head, and slender 5 to 14 segmented
antennae. |
Lakes, ponds, rivers, streams,
reservoirs and tanks. |
8 to 21 days |
| Black Blow Flies |
About 1/3" in length with a
shiny metallic dark blue abdomen and thorax. |
Dead animal carcasses; garbage
and wounds in living animals. |
8 to 10 days |
| Flesh Flies |
3/8" to 9/16" in length, dull
grayish-black in color with three dark stripes on the thorax. |
Decayed flesh and spoiling meat,
manure, wounds in living animals and sometimes garbage. |
8 to 21 days |
| Vinegar Flies |
About 1/8" in length, brownish-black
to brownish-yellow in color and have a feathery bristle on the antennae.
|
Fermenting or rotting fruit
and vegetable material and in garbage cans. |
|
| Dump Flies |
About 1/4" long, black in color
with a shiny thorax and abdomen. |
Garbage and fowl excrement.
The larvae are predaceous on larvae of other flies. |
|
| Secondary Screwworm Flies |
About 1/4" long, green in color,
shiny abdomen and thorax with thorax marked lengthwise with 3 dark stripes.
|
Dead tissue surrounding wounds
in animals, fresh cut meats, and garbage. |
9 to 39 days |
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This document is part of ENY-222, one of a series of the Entomology
and Nematology Department, Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of
Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Publication date: June
1991. Revised: March 2003.
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