flies and rats: a field guide to disgusting pests great and small

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Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

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Page 1: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Flies and Rats:

A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Page 2: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small
Page 3: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small
Page 4: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

The House Fly

Page 5: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

House Fly Pearls Adults are about ¼ inches in length and

have narrowly spaced red-brown eyes. Females are larger, 1/2 -3/4 inches and

have widely spaced red-brown eyes. Spongy—non-biting—mouthparts Dull gray body with four stripes on

length of thorax

Page 6: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

More Pearls Females live 3-4 weeks Each female can lay 5-6 broods of 75-

100 whitish, oval eggs, usually in a nutrient-rich environment such as garbage.

Larval stage (i.e., maggot) occurs within 12-24 hours

Pupal stage may take another week

Page 7: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

The Happy Couple Assume a mean temperature of 65o (F)

Assume two blissfully happy house flies. Assume a very Un-Darwinian world in

which the contented couple copulates copiously without the usual worry of predators who’ll spoil their fiesta de amor .

Page 8: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Be “fruitfly” and Multiply

If all the offspring survive, then our initial happy couple with the prodigious procreative predilection of their progeny, could produce theoretically a lineage of 191,010,000,000,000,000,000 (191 quintillion, 10 quadrillion) strong.

Page 9: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Tread Lightly If one assumes that an average house

fly occupies 1/8 cubic inches, then our happy couple would:

Cover the entire planet and Cover it to a depth of about 47 feet

Page 10: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Good and Bad News

Environmental factors tend to limit fly populations. Bury the dead, dispose of garbage, keep the privy door shut, don’t live adjacent to a farm, etc.

They regurgitate into the food they eat

Page 11: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Blow Flies

Page 12: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Characteristics Larger than common house flies Often have metallic colors Adults make a loud, droning sound Attracted to garbage, flesh (dead and

dying), dog droppings, etc. Flight range is between 3 and 10 miles

Page 13: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Flesh Fly

Page 14: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Charcteristics Adults look like large house flies Notable Differences: 3 stripes on the

thorax and a checkerboard pattern on the abdomen

Females deposit live maggots (not eggs) on decaying flesh and excrement (especially dog stools)

Page 15: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small
Page 16: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

Rodentry 101

Page 17: Flies and Rats: A Field Guide to Disgusting Pests Great and Small

The Skinny