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Sarcophaga

Sarcophaga spp.

Description:

Fly from the flesh-eating fly family. These flies are generally well-sized and of a greyish color; like many of their relatives, the typical patterns are lengthwise darker stripes on the thorax and dark and light square dots on the abdomen. Many have conspicuous red compound eyes. These are set further apart in females than in males; the females are also larger on average.

Habitat:

This genus occurs essentially worldwide. As the common name implies, their larvae typically feed on decaying meat. Some, however, rather eat the bacteria and other small organisms living on carrion. Many species have adapted to humans, and while they are usually nuisance pests, some are medically significant vectors of pathogens and bacteria. Sometimes, the larvae cause myiasis. Others are parasitoids of pest caterpillars and beneficial in forestry and orchards.

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5 Comments

The MnMs
The MnMs 11 years ago

Thanks!

Hema  Shah
Hema Shah 11 years ago

unique!

Jeannette
Jeannette 11 years ago

Nice shots :)

The MnMs
The MnMs 11 years ago

Yes, although I prefer the adult form of the species :)

Smith'sZoo
Smith'sZoo 11 years ago

have to admit it, this is a pretty fly...

The MnMs
Spotted by
The MnMs

Oud-Heverlee, Vlaanderen, Belgium

Spotted on Jul 22, 2012
Submitted on Aug 16, 2012

Spotted for Missions

Related Spottings

Sarcophaga sp. Flesh Fly Flesh Fly Grey flesh fly

Nearby Spottings

Blue-tailed Damselfly (pink variant) Blue-tailed Damselfly (violet variant) Creeping Thistle Blue-tailed Damselfly

Reference

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