Insects & Flies & Bugs Flashcards
1
Q
- What is the species and genus of the common housefly?
- What are its (2) distinguishing features?
A
- Musca domestica
- Four dark stripes on grey thorax
- Wing vien 4 bends to meet vein 3 very closely.
2
Q
- What is the species name for Stable flies?
- What size are they?
- How are they disinguished (2 features) from Musca domestica?
A
- Stomoxys
- 8 mm long, about the size of a large housefly
- grey colour, 4 dark stropes on thorax and several dark spots on the top of the abdomen
- Differentiating Stomoxys from Musca:
- proboscis
- wing venation: 4th vein turns up towards 3rd but does not approach so closely
3
Q
- Name stages of development of house fly
- How long to complete llife cycle?
A
- stages
- egg
- larva or maggot
- pupa
- adult
- 7-10 days
4
Q
- What is the family name for non-metallic blowflies?
- Other common names?
- How distinguished?
- What is distinct about life cycle?
A
- Sarcophagidae or Wohlfartia (flesh flies)
- Distinguishing features:
- non-metallic, usually grey or silver in colour
- thorax 3 longitudinal stripes
- abdomen marked with “chess-board” (Sarcophagidae) or well-defined dark spots (Wohlfahrtia).
- eyes red colour
5
Q
- What are scientific and common names for metallic blowflies?
- Distribution?
- What is their usual behaviour and clinical significance?
- What are their distinguishing features?
A
- Calliphora (bluebottles) and Lucilia (greenbottles)
- worldwide distribution
- normally lay eggs on rotting meat etc, sometimes also on purulent wounds and excreta. Presence of larvae does not usually lead to serious consequences as they feed on pus and dead tissues.
- Distinguishing features: blue or green metallic colour on thorax and abdomen, prominent bristes on dorsal surface of thorax (Chryosomia & Cochliomyia - screw worms - lack these)
6
Q
- What are screw worms?
- What is their life cycle?
- Identification of flies and larvae?
- What diseases
A
- larvae of Cochlyiomyia hominovorax (new world screw worm) and Chrysomya bezziana (old world screw worm)
- obligate parasites of living tissue that invade natural orifices, nose, mouth, eyes, vagina resulting in serious tissue destruction and pain
- blue-green metallic colour of adult flies
- no bristles on thorax)
7
Q
- Screw worms: life cycle and disease
- Morphology?
- Distinguish from what?
A
- larvae of Cochlyiomya hominovorax (new world screw worm) and Chrysomya bezziana (old world screw worm)
- eggs laid directly on skin, give rise to larvae that are
- obligate parasites of living tissue that invade natural orifices, nose, mouth, eyes, vagina resulting in serious tissue destruction and pain
- larvae have rows of stout spines like a screw thread
- distinguish from
- Dermatobia (human bot-fly)
- larvae have hooks on each segment
- Cordylobia (tumbu-fly or mango-fly)
- with smaller spines or spicules over dorsal surface
- Dermatobia (human bot-fly)
8
Q
- What are Cordylobia and Dermatobia?
- What disease do they cause?
- What are the distinguishing features of the larvae and from what should they be distinguished?
A
- Cordylobia anthropophaga is tumbu-fly or mango-fly (Africa)
- Dermatobia hominis is (human bot-fly) (South America)http://entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/misc/flies/human_bot_fly.htm
- they cause furuncular myiasis
9
Q
- distinguish between screw worms , tumbu-fly or mango-fly and human bot-fly
A
- Screw worms:
- larvae of Cochlyiomyia hominovorax (new world screw worm) and Chrysomya bezziana (old world screw worm)
- obligate parasites of living tissue that invade natural orifices, nose, mouth, eyes, vagina resulting in serious tissue destruction and pain distinguish from
- flies causing furuncular myiasis:
- (Dermatobia (human bot-fly)
- larvae have hooks on each segment
- Cordylobia (tumbu-fly or mango-fly)
- with smaller spines or spicules over dorsal surface
- (Dermatobia (human bot-fly)
10
Q
- What is Musca sorbens?
- What is it’s life cycle and preferred food?
- Clinical significance?
- Appearance?
A
- Musca sorbens is the
- bazaar fly or bush fly
- it lives outdoors and in the open
- lays eggs on human (preferred) or animal excreta in the open, not in pit latrines
- most frequent of flies seeking eyes, more attracted where discharge from eyes and/or nose
- may be common in refugee camps
- major transmitter of trachoma
- difficult to distinguish from Musca domestica
11
Q
- Musca domestica
- life cycle?
A
- feeds on human food, garbage, excreta, decayed plant and animal matter
- feeding sites 100-500 m from breeding sites, often in same decaying organic matter it feeds on
- found by day near food sources and breeding sites
- 7-10 days
12
Q
- What is the medical significance of the common house fly? i.e. transmits which diseases?
A
- omnivorous, feeds on feces and food
- transmits
- Enteric bacteria
- Shigella
- Salmonella
- E. coli
- Cholera
- Enteroviruses, inc. polio
- ¿Helminth eggs?
- Enteric bacteria
13
Q
- How does the common housefly transmit disease?
A
- defecation (every 5 minutes)
- regurgitation
- transport on body surface
14
Q
- What is the Lesser House Fly?
- What is distinctive about it’s appearance?
A
- Fannia cannicularis
- worldwide distribution
- smaller than the common housefly (3.5-6 mm length), does not have same 4th vein pattern
- otherwise similar in behaviour and clinical significance
- likes chicken farms
15
Q
- what kind of community control measures can be applied to control of houseflies and blowflies?
A
- although effective, spraying with insecticide is
- expensive
- leads to resistance
- therefore good waste disposal practice
- cover refuse with >25 cm soil
- keep only working edge of tip exposed
- make sure tip is tightly packed so increased temp kells larvae
- Disposal of human and animal excreta
- ventilated pit latrine
- manure piles
16
Q
- name four flies that are obligate parasites and two that are facultative parasites
A
- Obligate parasites
- furuncular boil-like swellings with one fly larva per boil
- Tumbu-fly or mango-fly (Cordylobia)
- human bot-fly (Dermatobia)
- invasive (screw-worms)
- Cochlyiomyia hominovorax (new world screw worm)
- Chrysomya bezziana (old world screw worm)
- furuncular boil-like swellings with one fly larva per boil
- Facultative parasites
- Non-invasive
- Lucilia (Green bottles)
- Calliphora (Blue bottles)
- Non-invasive
17
Q
- What is this?
- What is latin name?
- What does it look like? where found?
- Life cycle?
- What is normal host?
- lesions
A
- Tumbu fly larva
- Cordylobia anthropophaga
- Adult is inconspicuous brown coloured fly
- Africa
- Normal host is rat
- lays eggs on urine soaked clothes or sandy soil
- grub-shaped larvae burrow into skin to form boil-like swellings
- common around buttocks, genitalia and back
- emerge from skin after 8 days and fall to ground, where they pupate in soil
18
Q
- Cordylobia:
- common name?
- how treated?
- how prevented?
A
- common name tumbu-fly
- cover surface of furuncle with liquid paraffin
- this deprives larva of oxygen
- the paraffin coats the larva, which may then be able to be expelled with pressure applied to the sides of the furuncle
- conrolled by ironing oclothes
19
Q
- Dermatobia
- common name?
- life cycle?
A
- Dermatobia hominis
- human bot-flye or New World myiasis
- eggs attached to biting insect
- mosquito or Stomoxys
- larvae hatch and drop onto skin
- burrow into skin forming boil-like swelling
20
Q
- What are the identifying characteristics of Dermatobia?
- (what’s the disease and how transmitted)
A
- stout rose-thorn spines
- shape, esp of 2nd instar
- New World Myiasis
- dermatobia eggs attach to mosquito and are laied on human hosts
21
Q
- What are fleshflies?
- Common name?
- where found?
A
- Sarcophagidae
- common in refuse, butchers shops etc
- larvae of some occasionally cause myiasis (facultative parasite)
22
Q
- What is non-invasive myiasis?
- fly habitat?
- What is it caused by?
- substrate?
- therapeutic use?
- Identify the larvae
A
- caused by bluebottles (Calliphpra) and green bottles (Lucilia)
- usually breed in similar habitats to houseflies
- will infest and consume necrotic tissue e.g. foul smelling wounds, ulcers etc, sometimes found under bandages
- usually do not cause harm since they feed on dead and decaying tissue
- Baer’s maggot therapy
- Larvae without screw thread of spines
23
Q
- Dermatobia treatment?
A
- vaseline strategy may be insufficient
- may require surgical intervention or injection of anesthetic into base