Summary[edit] Description: Common green bottle fly (Lucilia caesar) perched on a blooming goldenrod. Padlinówka cesarska (Lucilia caesar) siedząca na kwitnącej nawłoci. Date: 19 August 2018, 09:29. Source: Common green bottle fly. Author: hedera.baltica from Wrocław, Poland. Camera location51° 04′ 45.93″ N, 17° 01′ 43.63″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 51.079424; 17.028787.
Summary[edit] Description: English: The screw-worm fly was the first pest successfully eliminated from an area through the sterile insect technique by the use of an integrated area-wide approach. Date: 10 June 2009. Source: The Mexican-American Commission for the Eradication of the Screwworm. Author: The Mexican-American Commission for the Eradication of the Screwworm. Permission(Reusing this file): Attribution: The Mexican-American Commission for the Eradication of the Screwworm.
Caroline Harding (MAF Plant Health & Environment Laboratory)
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[edit] Description: English: Lucilia cuprina, Headtop - Larvae : Diagnostic Notes : Abdomen integument metallic green. Fore femur metallic green. Thoracic squama bare. Wings hyaline; stem vien bare; basicosta yellow; subcostal sclerite pubescent. Suprasquamal ridge with posterior parasquamal tuft. Supraspiracular convexity pubescent. Postocular microtrichial pile (minute hairs) on vertex directed transversely, smooth, with a sharp boundary where pile changes direction. Humerus with 2-4 hairs. Quadrant between anterior margin and discal setae with 15-25 setulae. Male : Hairs on abdominal sternites much longer than on hind femur and tibia. Date: 18 March 2011. Source: PaDIL : High quality images and Information tools designed for Biosecurity and Biodiversity by the Australian Government Department of Agriculture and Water Resources. Author: Caroline Harding (MAF Plant Health & Environment Laboratory).
Summary[edit] Description: English: A Blow-fly (Chrysomia albiceps) on a fower of Hortensia. Date: 12 June 2010, 12:28:09. Source: Own work. Author: Alvesgaspar.
Summary[edit] A blow fly (Bengalia depressa). Pen and ink drawing by A.J.E. Title: A blow fly (Bengalia depressa). Pen and ink drawing by A.J.E. Description: A blow fly (Bengalia depressa). Pen and ink drawing by A.J.E. Terzi, ca. 1919. Iconographic Collections Keywords: Amedeo John Engel Terzi. Credit line: : This file comes from Wellcome Images, a website operated by Wellcome Trust, a global charitable foundation based in the United Kingdom. Refer to Wellcome blog post (archive).This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing.. References: Library reference: ICV No 23001 Photo number: V0022575 Full Bibliographic Record: http://catalogue.wellcomelibrary.org/record=b1199382. Source/Photographer: https://wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/obf_images/f1/c7/7922513ee1cbb6da080c1a8ed823.jpg Gallery: https://wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/image/V0022575.html Wellcome Collection gallery (2018-03-21): https://wellcomecollection.org/works/rnk8gjfaCC-BY-4.0. Licensing[edit] : This file is licensed under the Creative CommonsAttribution 4.0 International license. :. You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work to remix – to adapt the work Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 CC BY 4.0 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 truetrue.
Two green bottle flies chat over a meal of (relatively) fresh palmetto berry and arthropod-leg pudding at a popular local café. I apologize in advance for this one but I have completely run out of wildflowers! On a serious note for those who live near raccoon populations, the scat should be avoided and never handled as it usually contains eggs of a dangerous parasite that can infect humans: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baylisascaris_procyonis