misspelledsearch.com:

fly europe

information page

If you cannot find the information you are searching for on this page, we suggest searching Google with the correct spelling "fly europe":

Google

This article is about the insect. For other meanings, see Fly (disambiguation)
The Mediterranean fruit fly, or "medfly", Ceratitis capitata Dance fly male Empis tesselata The flesh-fly, Sarcophaga carnaria

As defined by entomologists, a fly (plural flies) is any species of insect of the order Diptera. These typically have one pair of true wings, with the hind wings modified into halteres. Flies are common amongst humans and some can cause the spread of serious diseases. The house-fly (Musca domestica) and mosquito are particularly common amongst humans. Other flies, such as the horse-fly (Family Tabanidae), can inflict painful bites. The larva of a fly is commonly called a maggot.

Flies rely heavily on sight for survival. The compound eyes of flies are composed of thousands of individual lenses and are very sensitive to movement. Some flies have very accurate 3D vision. A few, like Ormia ochracea, have very advanced hearing organs.

The diet of flies varies heavily between species. The horse-fly eats bits of flesh torn off of its prey, mosquitoes feed on blood and nectar, and the housefly eats a semi-digested liquid created by mixing-enzyme rich saliva with its food.

In addition to being an essential part of the food chain, some species of flies spread pollen, hasten the decomposition of plants, animals, and dung, and, in the case of about 5000 species of Tachina flies, eat other insects.

Contents

  • 1 Maggots
    • 1.1 Use in medicine
  • 2 Fly-like insects
  • 3 Rarest known fly
  • 4 Flies in art and popular culture
  • 5 External links

Maggots

The fly life cycle is composed of four stages: egg, larva (commonly known as a maggot), pupa, adult. The eggs are laid in decaying flesh, animal dung, manure, or pools of stagnant water - whatever has ample food for the larva.

Some types of maggots found on corpses can be of great use to forensic scientists. By their stage of development, these maggots can be used to give an indication of the time elapsed since death, as well as the place the organism died. The size of the house fly maggot is 9.5-19.1mm (3/8 to 3/4 inch). At the height of the summer season, a generation of flies (egg to adult) may be produced in 12-14 days.

Maggot identification uses a classification called "Instar" stages. An instar I is about 2-5 mm long; instar II 6-14 mm; instar III 15-20 mm. These measure about 2-3 days, 3-4 days, and 4-6 days (for average houseflies or bottleflies) since the eggs were laid. By use of this data, plus other signs, the approximate time since death can be estimated by forensic scientists.

Various maggots cause damage in agricultural crop production, including root maggots in rapeseed and midge maggots in wheat. Some maggots are leaf miners.

Maggots are bred commercially, as a popular bait in angling, and a food for carnivourous pets such as reptiles or birds.

Use in medicine

Through the ages maggots have been used in medicine in order to clean out necrotic wounds. For more information, see Maggot therapy.

Fly-like insects

House fly leg Flies attracted to a light in summer

The word "fly" also refers to insects of various orders other than Diptera. Entomologists try to distinguish between true flies and other orders by hyphenating the names of true flies (house-fly, horse-fly, crane-fly), but giving the members of other orders unhyphenated names, either with two unconnected words (caddis fly, alder fly) or with a single, concatenated name (dragonfly, stonefly).

  • firefly: Coleoptera:Lampyridae
  • caddis fly: Trichoptera
  • dragonfly and damselfly: Odonata
  • butterfly: Lepidoptera
  • stonefly: Plecoptera
  • mayfly: Ephemeroptera
  • sawfly: Hymenoptera:Tenthredinidae
  • scorpionfly and hangingfly: Mecoptera
  • alder fly, Dobson fly, and fish fly: Megaloptera

Rarest known fly

The world's rarest known fly family is Eurychoromyidae-Broad-headed Flies [1]

Flies in art and popular culture

In art, extremely life-like flies have sometimes been depicted in the trompe l'oeil paintings of the 15th century. An example is the painting Portrait of a Carthusian by Petrus Christus, showing a fly sitting on a fake frame. [2]

The 1958 science fiction film The Fly, remade in 1986, revolves around the accidental merger of a human and a fly.

In 2001, Garnet Hertz produced an art project in which a complete web server was implanted into a dead fly.

Fly | Global Music Culture was one of the UK's first webzines when it started in 1995. It now focusses on leftfield music from around the world.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: fly
  • Pictures of Flies and Other Observations
  • Information and Pictures About Flying Insects
  • Picture: Fly on a window
  • Fly with implanted web server, by Garnet Hertz.
  • How to get rid of flies

This fly europe index site has been developed to help wayward users find the information they are looking for, no matter how they are mistakenly spelled or mistyped. This site is designed to help users find fly europe information for the following query variants:

fly fly eulope fly europ fly eulop
fly euroep fly eurpoe fly euorpe fly eruope
fly uerope fly euroe fly eurpe fly euope
fly erope fly urope europe ly europe
flie europe frie europe fli europe fry europe
fri europe lie europe rie europe li europe
ry europe ri europe fl europe fr europe
fie europe fy europe fi europe phie europe
phy europe phi europe fiy europe fyl europe
lfy europe

If you would like to add or correct the content of this site, or if you are interested in supporting the efforts of misspelledsearch.com by placing your product information on these fly europe pages, please contact mistype@gmail.com for details.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "fly".