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  2. Try these easy DIY remedies to get rid of gnats for good - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/try-easy-diy-remedies-rid...

    Gnats that bite, like deer flies or biting midges, are usually encountered outdoors and “use their mouthparts to puncture and cut a host’s skin, leaving behind symptoms such as itchiness ...

  3. Lipoptena cervi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipoptena_cervi

    These flies are commonly encountered in temperate areas of Europe, Siberia, and northern China. They have been introduced to North America. [12] They are parasites of elk, deer, and other deer family members, burrowing through the fur and sucking the blood of the host animals. Adults are only 5–7 mm (0.20–0.28 in) in length and brownish in ...

  4. Lipoptena mazamae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipoptena_mazamae

    Lipoptena mazamae, the Neotropical deer ked, is a fly from the family Hippoboscidae.They are blood-feeding parasites of the white-tailed deer - Odocoileus virginianus in the southeastern United States and Central America, the red brocket deer - Mazama americana in Mexico to northern Argentina, and also an incidental parasite of domestic cattle, Cougars - Puma concolor, and man.

  5. Deer fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_fly

    Chrysopsinae is an insect subfamily in the family Tabanidae commonly known as deer flies or sheep flies and are bloodsucking insects considered pests to humans and cattle. [3] They are large flies with large brightly-coloured compound eyes, and large clear wings with dark bands. [4] They are larger than the common housefly and smaller than the ...

  6. Ask the Master Gardener: From white flies to deer, how to rid ...

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  7. Deer botfly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_botfly

    The fly would have produced an audible sonic boom; The supersonic fly would have been invisible to the naked eye; and; The impact trauma of such a fly colliding with a human body would resemble that of a gunshot wound. Using the original report as a basis, Langmuir estimated the deer botfly's true speed at a more plausible 25 mph (40 km/h).

  8. Deer flies through both windshields in crash that killed ...

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    The crash was one of two fatal collisions involving a deer that day in the state, according to local media reports. Deer flies through both windshields in crash that killed driver, New Jersey cops say

  9. Lipoptena depressa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lipoptena_depressa

    The female fly will produce a single larva at a time, retaining the larva internally for all three instars. She then gives birth to the pre-pupal third-instar larva which promptly pupates and falls from the host deer. When the fly has completed its metamorphosis, the winged adult emerges and begins searching for a host.