Cluster fly

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wikipedia:How to read a taxobox
How to read a taxobox
Cluster flies
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Suborder: Brachycera
Infraorder: Muscomorpha
Family: Calliphoridae
Genus: Pollenia
Species

e.g.

  • Pollenia advena
  • Pollenia amentaria
  • Pollenia angustigena
  • Pollenia bicolor
  • Pollenia contempta
  • Pollenia dasypoda
  • Pollenia griseotomentosa
  • Pollenia hungarica
  • Pollenia labialis
  • Pollenia leclercqiana
  • Pollenia luteovillosa
  • Pollenia nigripalpis
  • Pollenia paupera
  • Pollenia pediculata
  • Pollenia ponti
  • Pollenia pseudintermedia
  • Pollenia pseudorudis
  • Pollenia rudis
  • Pollenia stigi
  • Pollenia tenuiforceps
  • Pollenia vagabunda
  • Pollenia venturii
  • Pollenia verneri
  • Pollenia viatica

The cluster flies are the genus Pollenia in the blowfly family Calliphoridae. Unlike more familiar blowflies such as the bluebottle genus Phormia, they do not present a health hazard because they do not lay eggs in human food. They are strictly parasitic on earthworms; the females lay their eggs near earthworm burrows, and the larvae then infest the worms. However, the flies are a nuisance because when the adults emerge in the late summer or autumn they enter houses to hibernate, often in large numbers; they are difficult to eradicate because they favour inaccessible spaces such as roof and wall cavities. They are often seen on windows of little-used rooms. They are also sometimes known as attic flies.

The typical cluster fly Pollenia rudis is about 7 mm long (a little bigger than a house fly) and can be recognised by distinct lines or stripes behind the head, short golden-coloured hairs on the thorax, and irregular light and dark gray areas on the abdomen. Cluster flies are typically slow moving.

Cluster flies have a widespread distribution. Six species are found in Britain and thirty one in Europe. Pollenia species are also and numerous in Australia and New Zealand (over 30 spp); they are a common pest in North America. P. rudis has spread widely in association with humans.

These insects are a subject of the Phish song Farmhouse, which was recorded in Vermont.

[edit] External links