Showing posts with label Greenbottle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greenbottle. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Fatal attraction, to yarrow
Yarrow Achillea millefolium is a later summer wild flower that provides easily-accessed pollen and nectar for visiting insects, right up until the end of autumn. It's particularly popular with flies, like this greenbottle, and with hoverflies and droneflies. They can feed without expending much energy, simply by landing and walking from floret to floret across the flat-topped umbel.
But sometimes just landing on the flowers can be hazardous. About thirty yarrow plants were hanging over a wall along Mortham Lane beside Rokeby park in Teesdale. They had been blown sideways by high winds during their early growth, and at the same time their flower heads had defied gravity and curled upwards, so the whole plant protruded from the wall like a long coat hook. And in that hook, in every plant, a money spider had built its hammock-shaped web, beside the flower head. Money spiders usually sling their horizontal hammock webs in hedges or low in the grass, but this population had taken advantage of the yarrow scaffolding that an accident of wind and gravity had provided.
I watched these plants swaying in the wind, while a long procession of insects came to feed. Drone flies are skilled hoverers and negotiated the risky landing successfully, and .....
.... hoverflies timed their approach and landing with even more precision, avoiding the spider's snare. But there was plenty of evidence, in the form of wings and legs in the webs, that other flies had been less fortunate, and had made a fatal landing in the money spider's web. I saw a blundering greenbottle land in the web, but with good fortune and some frantic buzzing it just managed to extricate itself before the spider arrived.
And in this old web a well-fed occupant had evidently done enough feeding, and had woven its egg cocoon amongst the leaves below the flower head, that had acted as bait for its victims.
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
The irresistible attraction of fermented plums
After a bumper plum harvest, the last few fallers have attracted a host of insects, including ......
...... bluebottles and greenbottles ........
....... hosts of these little vinegar flies (aka fruit flies) .....
...... a yellow fly with red eyes that might be a dung fly .....
..... and several of these lovely red admirals.
Labels:
bluebottle,
butterflies,
Greenbottle,
plums,
red admiral
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Nauseatingly beautiful...
The colour of a greenbottle fly Lucilia sericata is undeniably exquisite - an iridescent, metallic shade of green that, if it graced a beetle or maybe a damselfly, would be unreservedly admired.
In sunlight the exoskeleton of the fly almost looks like polished brass.
Unfortunately there's another side to greenbottles that's rather less attractive but nonetheless fascinating - and if you don't want to know about it, read no further..........
...........but, on the other hand, if you can't contain your curiosity, read on .......
When an animal dies it's often a greenbottle that is the first fly to find the corpse, which it can detect over long distances. The rate of development of the eggs that it lays and the maggots that hatch have been well calibrated in laboratory studies, so forensic entomologists can say with some accuracy how long a body has been dead by looking at the stage of development of the maggots, which take around four days to develop (depending on temperature) before they crawl out of the corpse and pupate in the soil nearby.
Greenbottle maggots feed on dead tissue and bacteria that contaminate it, so they have been used medicinally in maggot therapy, where sterile maggots preferentially eat necrotic tissue around wounds and also secrete a natural antibiotic, speeding up the healing of wounds. I don't know whether this treatment is available on the National Health Service yet but the NHS has certainly taken an interest in it and its use was debated in the House of Commons in 2007.
If you click here you can read a scientific paper that describes the history of maggot therapy and its modern applications. You can also read a Wikipedia article on the subject by clicking here.
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Greenbottle
The surface of this greenbottle is so shiny that I can make out the outline of my head and camera lens reflected in its thorax.
Labels:
Greenbottle,
Lucilia caesar
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