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  2. Are annoying gnats, fruit flies plaguing your home? Banish ...

    www.aol.com/news/annoying-gnats-fruit-flies...

    "There are actually three different types of flying insects that [it could be]: the fruit fly, the fungus gnat and the drain fly," said Dave Burns, president of Burns Pest Elimination ...

  3. Gnats? Fruit flies? Here’s why you have ‘em (and how to get ...

    www.aol.com/gnats-fruit-flies-why-em-193153355.html

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  4. Phoridae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoridae

    The Phoridae are a family of small, hump-backed flies resembling fruit flies. Phorid flies can often be identified by their escape habit of running rapidly across a surface rather than taking flight. This behaviour is a source of one of their alternate names, scuttle fly. Another vernacular name, coffin fly, refers to Conicera tibialis. [1]

  5. Try These Hacks to Get Rid of Those Pesky Fruit Flies - AOL

    www.aol.com/6-easy-ways-rid-fruit-003200262.html

    Gnats tend to be gray or black, while fruit flies range from light tan to reddish orange and brown. Fruit flies have a taste for too-ripe fruit and other produce and thrive on high-fructose ...

  6. 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.

  7. Gnat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnat

    Gnat from Robert Hooke's Micrographia, 1665 A female black fungus gnat. A gnat (/ ˈ n æ t /) is any of many species of tiny flying insects in the dipterid suborder Nematocera, especially those in the families Mycetophilidae, Anisopodidae and Sciaridae. [1] Most often they fly in large numbers, called clouds.

  8. Overwhelmed by gnats? Here's why the gnat populations ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/overwhelmed-gnats-heres-why-gnat...

    These gnats you are seeing are called black flies. They are also known as buffalo gnats or turkey gnats. Black flies are no bigger than a fourth of an inch long with a hump-backed body, ...

  9. Drosophilidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drosophilidae

    The Drosophilidae are a diverse, cosmopolitan family of flies, which includes species called fruit flies, although they are more accurately referred to as vinegar or pomace flies. [1] Another distantly related family of flies, Tephritidae , are true fruit flies because they are frugivorous, and include apple maggot flies and many pests.