Common Housefly (Musca Domestica)
Adults, 6-8 mm long with 13-15 mm wingspan; Grey Thorax with 4 longitudinal dark stripes; basal half of abdomen buff-coloured and occasionally transparent at sides, with central dark band broadening to cover last abdominal segments; at rest, the wings are spread.
Houseflies can transmit intestinal worms, or their eggs, and are potential vectors of diseases such as, dysentery, gastroenteritis, typhoid, cholera and tuberculosis. They will frequent and feed indiscriminately on any liquefiable solid food, which may equally be moist, putrefying material or food stored for human consumption.
Flies liquefy food by regurgitating digestive juices and their stomach contents onto the food substance. This “liquid” is then drawn up by the suctorial mouth parts and in so doing the insects pick up pathogenic organisms, which may collect on their bodies to be transferred on contact with other surfaces or survive passage through the gut to be deposited as fly spot.
Bluebottles
Bluebottles are 11mm long and quite distinctive with their deep metallic blue colour. They primarily breed on dead and decaying animal matter. The adult are active fliers and can travel several miles. They will readily enter buildings to find breeding sites.
Cluster Flies
Cluster Flies are found commonly throughout Europe and the U.K. The common name refers to their habit of clustering and hibernating in numbers in buildings.
The adult female lays eggs on and around damp soil beneath dead and rotting leaves etc., the life cycle of a fly is very dependent on weather conditions. In Britain it seems that two generations per year are common, but in hot summers up to four generations per year are possible.
During the summer and early autumn these flies are of no consequence. As temperatures drop they search for shelter and frequently form vast clustering masses in roof spaces and lofts, with several thousand flies clustered together. Often a single house or building in a row of similar buildings will be chosen year after year.
Fruit Flies
Fruit flies are tiny (3mm) brownish or yellowish, red eyed flies, which are attracted to fermenting fruit and alcoholic drinks. They comprise a large, cosmopolitan family, Drosophilidae, and may species are common; the genus drosophila contains some 1,000 species.
They can be a minor pest in orchards or where fruit is stored, particularly in warmer countries. Most feed as larvae on or in decaying fruit and vegetation.
During summer months they can enter houses and they fly with a hovering ponderous flight.