ArticleTrader.com
  

 Main Menu

  Home
  Member Login
  Forum
  Submit Article
  Membership
  RSS Feeds
  Contact Us
  About

 Services

  Article Distribution
  Link Building

 Tools

  ArticleMS
  Directory Tracker

 Categories

  Automotive
  Business
  Computers
  Entertainment
  Finance
  Food
  Health
  Home and Family
  » Gardening
  » Hobbies
  » Home Improvement
  » Home Security
  » Interior Design
  » Kids
  » Parenting
  » Pets
  » Pregnancy
  Internet
  Legal
  Science
  Self Improvement
  Shopping
  Society
  Sports
  Technology
  Travel
  Writing

187 users online.



 
  » Category Sponsors
  Get Your Link Here - Limited Time Bargain at only $11/month!

Home » Home-and-family » Home-improvement » A Brief History of the common Fly

JohnSrn
Article written by JohnSrn

View Full Profile
Get Html Code
PDF | Print View | Post to your Site

A Brief History of the common Fly

Submitted by JohnSrn
Fri, 20 Feb 2009

Make Money With Your Site!
Sell Links off your
site at ReverseLinks.
Buy Permenant Links
Get Permanent Text Links
for cheap.
A housefly is the common name for insects of the order Diptera family, or common fly. Most common flies are either harmful for they carry disease transmitting pathogens or just being a nuisance due to their voracious habits of biting or bloodsucking.

The common fly, which is scientifically referred to as Musca domestica, is generally a very small, two-winged and grey with dark stripes fly. It’s commonly found in virtually all human habitations. Common fly or mostly known as a Housefly are major pests affecting man. After walking on excrement, it may carry and transmit pathogens that not only cause typhoid, cholera, dysentery, leprosy, poliomyelitis, and infectious hepatitis, but also may carry eggs of parasitic worms such as hookworms and roundworms. It’s been found that small round worms carried by common flies can cause permanent blindness on people.

Common Flies are also known to spread diseases and parasites to animals. For instance the infection of an animal caused by a house fly larvae (maggots) is referred to as Myiasis. This infection is common in all livestock such as cattle, sheep, and goats.
Myiasis has also been reported in human beings particularly when certain species of flies are attracted to ulcerated or injured skin. When they lay eggs on the ulcerated skin; the eggs hatches and the larvae then proceeds to burrow into the skin.

Depending on the type of fly, the larvae may remain in the skin and hence causes boil-like lesions, the larvae may even move extensively through the blood streams and eventually to the entire body. This may lead to damage of various vital body organs.

When human ingest food contaminated with common fly larvae it may lead to what is referred to as Intestinal myiasis.
It’s been found that an adult female common fly lays several hundred eggs in decaying matter such as vegetable, manure, compost, and garbage. The larvae, or maggots, mature in as little as a week. With less than five days in the pupae stage. The pupae are deeply buried in dark brown soil or heaps of waste and decaying matter. More than six generations may hatch in a single summer, this results in hutching of a vast number of houseflies.

Extensive use of insecticides to control common flies has made many housefly species to develop resistance to these chemicals that formerly killed them. Chemical insecticides though being harmful to the environment; they pose a threat to human beings and animals. Environmental management suggests good sanitation, proper waste management and safe, effective, non-chemical fly trap, such as the Rid-Max Fly Trap, have been propagated to be the best methods of common fly management and control.

Remember that when searching for food, common flies normally follow each other.  They are said to watch each other constantly; when one fly finds food, all others gathers to feast. This is the reason behind how big the success of the Rid-Max Fly Trap. This non chemical trap traps the flies alive and as they buzz they attract other flies in the trap. The buzzing flies release a natural chemical called the pheromones which act as a bait to other unwitting insects to the trap.

--

 

If you are tired of having flies all over your house then you have to try our Fly Traps and Fly Killer solutions which will put a stop to these annoying insects, visit our site at TrapandKill.com


Source: ArticleTrader.com
Creative Commons License

Comments

No comments posted.

Add Comment

You do not have permission to comment. If you log in, you may be able to comment.

 Top Authors

 1 Stebee (3270)
 2 limalan88 (2920)
 3 alien82 (2756)
 4 kajuba (2508)
 5 sverdlow (1712)
 6 juliet (1691)
 7 jamiehanson (1690)
 8 MarkeD (1296)
 9 AnthonyF (1244)
 10 robertoms2003 (1212)
 11 articles (1205)
 12 artavia.seo (1148)
 13 spinxwebdesign (1113)
 14 gprather (1071)
 15 cj (1069)

 Distribution

Article Distribution

  
  Affiliate Program 2Checkout.com, Inc. is an authorized retailer of ArticleTrader.com

0.02s