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  2. Housefly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housefly

    The house-fly, Musca domestica Linn. : its structure, habits, development, relation to disease and control by C. Gordon Hewitt (1914) How to control house and stable flies without using pesticides. Agriculture Information Bulletin Number 673 Archived 28 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine; House fly on the UF/IFAS Featured Creatures Web site

  3. Muscidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscidae

    Muscidae, some of which are commonly known as house flies or stable flies due to their synanthropy, are worldwide in distribution and contain almost 4,000 described species in over 100 genera. Most species are not synanthropic. Adults can be predatory, hematophagous, saprophagous, or feed on a number of types of plant and animal exudates.

  4. Nematocera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nematocera

    The Nematocera (the name meaning "thread-horns") are a suborder of elongated flies with thin, segmented antennae and mostly aquatic larvae.This group is paraphyletic and contains all flies except for species from suborder Brachycera [4] (the name meaning "short-horns"), which includes more commonly known species such as the housefly or the common fruit fly.

  5. File:Common house fly, Musca domestica.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Common_house_fly...

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  6. Parasitic flies of domestic animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parasitic_flies_of...

    All calliphorid flies are all large, robust, strong day-time fliers. Their antennae are as described above for house-flies and others in the Family Muscidae. Adult flies in family Calliphoridae feed as adults of both sexes mostly on proteinaceous liquids found on surface of decaying animal carcasses and similar material.

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  9. Fly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly

    The pupa is a tough capsule from which the adult emerges when ready to do so; flies mostly have short lives as adults. Diptera is one of the major insect orders and of considerable ecological and human importance. Flies are major pollinators, second only to the bees and their Hymenopteran relatives.