Showing posts with label Entomophthora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entomophthora. Show all posts
Thursday, June 16, 2016
A Day in the Life of a Dung Fly
Thursday's Guardian Country Diary is about dung flies Scathophaga stercoraria
These common insects carry out their courtship on dung but are particularly fond of cow-pats. This is a male, awaiting the arrival of females. They prefer fresh dung, before it becomes too crusty, for attracting the females that scent the trysting place from downwind.
Males usually outnumber them so there is intense competition for a mate, which females usually choosing the largest suitors. Their sex lives have been intensively studied because these insects are easy to rear under laboratory conditions - you can read about the intimate details of their mating habits by clicking here.
Their Latin generic name Scathophaga (originally Scatophaga, but it seems to have acquired an additional h) means 'dung-eater' but it is only the larvae, which hatch from eggs laid in animal dung, that do this. The adult flies are formidable hunters, needing to catch and eat other insects to complete their sexual development before they are capable of breeding. This one has caught a small hoverfly and is holding it between its front legs, in much the same way that mantids hold their prey.
Many dung flies suffer a gruesome fate when they are infected with a fungus called Entomophthora. Its hyphae grow into their host through its spiracles and invade its body, digesting it until it weakens. In the final phase the fungus turns its host into a zombie, affecting its nervous system in a way that makes it climb towards the light. The flies die clasping grass stems, where the spores erupt through their body and are passed on to other inquisitive flies that investigate the corpse.
The pictures below, taken using a microscope, show the sticky spores on the dead dung fly host.
Monday, July 22, 2013
Natural insecticide
I found numerous examples of mummified, dead flies of various species (but mostly dung flies) attached to plant stems in the garden during the early days of July, although the incidence of diseased flies has declined during the current hot weather. They've been killed by the fungus Entomophthora muscae.
The fungus invades the fly's body and slowly weakens it. In the final stages of infection the disease modifies the host's behaviour so that it crawls to an exposed position at the top of a plant stem and then dies. Soon fungal spores erupt from the insect's body, as you can see in the photo above, and the corpse is perfectly positioned to pass on the infection to other flies in the vicinity.
There have been numerous attempts to culture this fungus so that it could be used as a commercial biological insecticide for reducing house fly populations - with limited success.
Labels:
biological control,
Dung fly,
Entomophthora,
Flies,
fungi
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