Difference between revisions of "Hydrotaea irritans"

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{| cellpadding="10" cellspacing="0" border="1"
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| Also known as:
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| '''Sheep headfly
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[[Image:Hydrotaea irritans.jpg|thumb|right|150px|H.irritans female - Copyright Alan Hadley]]
 
[[Image:Hydrotaea irritans.jpg|thumb|right|150px|H.irritans female - Copyright Alan Hadley]]
 
[[Image:Hydrotaea irritans male.jpg|thumb|right|150px|H.irritans male - Copyright Alan Hadley]]
 
[[Image:Hydrotaea irritans male.jpg|thumb|right|150px|H.irritans male - Copyright Alan Hadley]]
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===Scientific Classification===
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| Phylum
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| Arthropoda
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| Class
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| Insecta
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| Order
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| Diptera
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| Family
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| Trichodectidae
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|}
  
 
==Hosts==
 
==Hosts==

Revision as of 16:41, 20 July 2010

Also known as: Sheep headfly
H.irritans female - Copyright Alan Hadley
H.irritans male - Copyright Alan Hadley

Scientific Classification

Phylum Arthropoda
Class Insecta
Order Diptera
Family Trichodectidae

Hosts

Cattle, sheep, and horses.

Identification

H. irritans is morphologically very similar in appearance to Musca. The adult flies are 4-7mm in length, have a green thorax and a yellow abdomen.

Life Cycle

The female lays eggs in the faeces, or decaying vegetation. Eggs then hatch into larvae in the autumn, and begin to mature. However, development is haltered until the following spring. They then undergo pupation, and maturation is complete. Adults emerge in summer.


Pathogenesis

  • Cattle
    • Evidence suggests that they transmit summer mastitis
  • Sheep
    • Cause extreme irritation
      • Mouthparts rasp the skin to feed on secretions and exudate
    • Leads to self-inflicted damage
      • E.g. 'Broken Head'
    • Secondary bacterial infection may occur
    • Blowfly strike may follow