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Tachinid Fly

Dejeana sp.

Photo by Johan Heyns
Published on Project Noah
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-26.4993, 28.3396

Field Notes

Description:

This is an important agent in terms of biological control of a number of other insects, which parasitize caterpillars, beetles, grasshoppers, and other insects.

Habitat:

Tachinid flies are generally small (about the size of houseflies), often bristly, and sometimes brilliantly colored. The female typically lays her white oval eggs on the skin of the host insect, though the eggs of some species are inserted in the host's body, and the eggs of others are left in the host's environment, as for example on leaves, where the host will ingest them. The larvae feed on the host tissues, causing death. Tachinid flies are widely used as a means of biological control of insect pests. Some tachinid flies are themselves parasitized by certain wasps (see ichneumon fly). (http://education.yahoo.com/reference/encyclopedia/entry/tachinid)

Species ID Suggestions

Comments (1)

nice series, I keep looking but I haven't managed to track down any of these little bristly guys yet.
Photographed
PublishedApril 13, 2013

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