Botflies

family of parasitic flies

Botflies, the Oestridae, are a family of flies consisting of about 150 known species. Botfly larvae are internal parasites of mammals — some botfly species grow in the host's flesh and others grow in the gut. Myiasis caused by Dermatobia hominis often afflicts people who are residents or visitors in the tropical regions of the Americas.

Quotes

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  • The nasal botfly Oestrus ovis (Diptera, Cyclorrhapha: Oestridae) is a myiasis-causing insect species, which affects the health of sheep, goats and humans. Gravid females are viviparous and larviposit into the animal’s nostrils. Host-searching and larvipositing flies are visually guided and influenced by climatic conditions, whereas olfaction seemed to play no role in this process. However, here, we show that the antennae of adult O. ovis female flies are relatively small but well developed and inhabited by several types of olfactory sensilla. Further, we show that the antennal lobes of this species receive input from antennal afferents and consist of a clearly defined glomerular organisation. We also give the first evidence of the fly’s ability to detect several synthetic odour compounds.
    • Simone Poddighe, Teun Dekker, Antonio Scala, and Anna Maria Angioy, (2010). "Olfaction in the female sheep botfly". Naturwissenschaften 97: 827-835. DOI:10.1007/s00114-010-0700-0.
  • ... the way mosquitoes serve botflies in Central and South America. The size of a bumblebee, the fly seizes a mosquito in midair and glues her own eggs to her captive's abdomen. Later, when the mosquito feeds on a person, the damp warmth of human skin causes the fly's eggs to hatch, leaving maggots to burrow into the new host. Soon, the maggot's breathing apparatus can be seen poking through the victim's skin. Within a week, it's as large as a small olive.
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  •   Encyclopedic article on Botfly on Wikipedia
  •   The dictionary definition of botfly on Wiktionary