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| Domestic flies, often called Filth Flies, are not only a nuisance by their presence, but are important from a human and animal health standpoint. Learn about the different insects and pests that affect gardens, lawns and food crops, and how to deal with them. |
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Domestic Flies
Submit your comments, tips, or suggestions you'd like to share with other users regarding this article. Reference: Ohio State University Extension Domestic flies, often called "Filth Flies," are not only a nuisance by their presence, but are important from a human and animal health standpoint. House flies may spread diseases such as conjunctivitis, poliomyelitis, typhoid fever, tuberculosis, anthrax, leprosy, cholera, diarrhea and dysentery. They may serve as intermediate hosts for parasitic tapeworms on poultry or parasitic roundworms on horses. Certain larvae of blow flies, bottle flies, screwworm flies and flesh flies may feed on dead as well as living tissue of mammals, causing blood poisoning and even death, especially in sheep. Stable flies bite painfully, sucking blood from humans and animals. False stable flies do not bite, but spread certain diseases, whereas the little house fly hovers in mid air in the middle of rooms.
House Fly
Bottle and Blow Flies Flesh Fly Adults resemble overgrown house flies with three stripes on the thorax and a checkerboard pattern on their abdomen. Females deposit living maggots rather than eggs in decaying flesh of dead animals and excrement, especially dog stools. The life cycle is about eight days. Black Garbage Fly Adults are shiny black and about 2/3 the size of a house fly. Their life cycle is similar to the house fly. They may become abundant in piles of poultry and dairy cattle manure. The larvae are "beneficial" by preying on other fly larvae, especially the house fly. However, excessive numbers of adults may become annoying. Drone Fly or Syrphid Fly Adults are clothed in dense, short, yellow hairs giving the appearance of a large honey bee. Larvae, known as "Rattailed Maggots," develop in polluted water. The life cycle from egg to adult is about 30 days in the summer with the larval stages lasting about 18 days and the pupal stage about 10 days. Stable Fly Adults resemble house flies except for the slender, pointed, sharp beak used to pierce skin and suck blood. Bites are painful. These flies may transmit anthrax and possibly infantile paralysis, leprosy, surra and swamp fever. Normally an outdoor fly, it attacks any warmblooded animal from rats to humans. Females lay four to five batches of eggs, each containing 100 to 150 eggs, in rotting straw; stable manure; moist, spilled feed; piles of lawn clippings; and piles of dead weeds washed along streams. The life cycle is about three weeks; both males and females suck blood.
False Stable Fly Little House Fly Adults are similar to house flies except they are smaller - 1/8 to 3/16 inch long. They have sponging mouthparts and feed on liquids. Male flies are usually seen in homes, where they hover in the middle of rooms. Females lay eggs in semiliquid organic matter such as animal and human excrement. The life cycle requires about 24 days. Control Measures A community educational program plus the services of a licensed pest control applicator are needed in neighborhoods with widespread fly problems. Preventative Use garbage cans with tight fitting lids lined inside with plastic bags. Locate the garbage cans or trash receptacles as far away from the house or building as possible to reduce nuisance flies nearby. Dispose of garbage at least twice weekly at a regular landfill, by incineration or burying in the soil, if local health regulations permit. Eliminate all potential breeding materials such as rotting straw or mulch, manure, garbage and animal excrement. Avoid damp pet foods left outdoors for several days. Eliminate carcasses of dead animals and birds. Any potential breeding material should be spread out thinly in the field and allowed to dry to prevent fly development. Dispose of piles of old, wet, lawn clippings, leaves, manure stacks, old wet hay or straw bales and other such debris. Waste piles can be covered with black plastic which will heat the organic matter, destroying fly development. Use adequate screens of 10 mesh on windows and doors to prevent fly entry or 18 mesh to exclude mosquito-size flies. Screen doors should open outward and have fitted springs for tight closing. A double set of doors is best where adult fly populations are heavy. If doors are opened constantly, use an air stream with a velocity of 1,600 feet per minute or more. Bead curtains are an alternative to screens in areas of heavy traffic. Beads should be oval with each string's beads offset from the next string so that the beads fit into each other's contours, eliminating gaps. Beads have been used in the past to brush flies off people and pets. Drain wet, low areas by using clean gravel and other fill. Eliminate any standing surface water through proper surface grade and tiling if needed. It is best and cheapest economically to replace a 100 watt mercury vapor light (ultra violet energy) with a 50 watt high pressure sodium vapor light or dichrom yellow non-insect attractant light. Place lights away from potential points of fly entry. At picnics and cookouts, keep foods covered and protected from flies until eaten. Remove fermenting overripe fruits from the ground. Flies may move several miles within a day or two, often originating from unsanitary sites. A simple fly swatter or folded newspaper is effective indoors against a few individual flies (thin wire stems and natural fiber head swatters are superior to the plastic ones). Rolls of sticky flypaper are available from most hardware stores. Use on back porches, garages and storage sheds where aesthetics are not of primary importance. Electric light traps are available commercially to capture specimens for identification, reduce some adult fly populations and monitor the effectiveness of control programs. Some traps use bait to attract and capture flies. Insecticides Treat outdoor surfaces where flies rest, especially around doors, windows, screens, garbage cans and trash piles with a residual spray of an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) approved, labelled insecticide such as chlorpyrifos, permethrin or other synthetic pyrethroids. Indoors, use space sprays or aerosols containing synergized pyrethrins or synthetic pyrethroids labelled for flies in the home. Labelled Insecticides General Use insecticides include:
Note: Some formulations of chlorpyrifos (Duration, Dursban, Empire) and permethrin (Astro, Dragnet, Ectiban, Flee, Permanone, Prelude, Torpedo) are restricted use. Restricted Use insecticides include:
Note: Some formulations of methomyl (Flytek) are labelled for outdoor use only while chlorpyrifos + pyrethrins (Dual Use) and methoxychlor (Marlate) are labelled for animal quarters use only. Remember: Before using any insecticide, always read and follow label directions and safety precautions (the label is the law). Again in some cases, heavy fly populations are best controlled by a licensed pesticide applicator or professional pest control firm. Homeowners often do not have the experience, availability of certain insecticides and equipment needed to perform the control job effectively on certain fly species.
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| Data Source: Ohio State University Extension. Articles and resource may contain pesticide recommendations that are subject to change at any time. These recommendations are provided only as a guide and it is always the pesticide applicator's responsibility, by law, to read and follow all current label directions for the specific pesticide being used. |