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The cluster fly is a pest in homes, schools, and
commercial buildings in Europe, Canada and the United States.
Cluster flies derive their common name from their habit of entering
a home or building in the fall and gathering together in clusters,
usually in the attic or upper regions of buildings. The behavior of
the flies is a good identifying feature. The flies are strongly
attracted to light and will blunder about lights and windows,
colliding with any object in their path. They often drop to the
floor on their backs and spin noisily until exhausted. The annoyance
of cluster flies usually begins mid-August and may continue until
April.
Cluster flies closely resemble house flies but are
larger and slower in their movements. They are dark gray with
checkered black and silvery-black abdomens. A newly emerged fly has
many golden hairs on its thorax which may be lost as the fly ages.
The stripes on the thorax are not as prominent as on the house fly,
and the wings of cluster flies overlap over the abdomen when at
rest. The wings of houseflies do not overlap over the abdomen when
at rest. Cluster flies, when crushed, may have an odor similar to
buckwheat honey and, when gathered together, they may emit a 'sickly
sweetish' odor.
Adult female flies that have survived the winter
deposit eggs in cracks and crevices in the soil. The larvae, upon
hatching, parasitize the earthworm Allolobophora rosea. This
earthworm is red and about one inch in length when contracted (these
earthworms are not the large earthworms, Lumbricus
terrestris, commonly seen in the soil). Control of earthworms to
control the cluster fly is not recommended or effective, since flies
may have originated from up to a mile away from the site of
infestation. The total developmental period of the fly, from egg to
adult, varies from 27 to 39 days, depending upon temperature and
other environmental factors.
Cluster flies can be found in fields throughout the
summer, and movement towards shelter appears to be initiated by a
sudden drop in temperature. From this point on, the behavior of the
flies is characteristic--in the afternoon they settle on the upper
parts of walls and on roofs, facing south or southwest, sunning
themselves. As the sun sets, they crawl into any crevice on the
exterior of buildings, but usually near the roof. For a few days,
they come out during the day and return to the warmth of the
building at night. Eventually they continue to move into the
interior of the building and remain there to spend the winter. As
warm spells occur throughout the winter, flies may break their
dormancy and begin to move about inside the infested building. Flies
that survive the winter reverse the behavior exhibited during the
fall, emerge, and begin the next generation.
It is not fully known why flies 'choose' a
particular house to infest. There is some evidence that the shape
and construction (openings) of the roof are involved in promoting
infestations. Also, once flies have entered a structure, the
sweetish odor they emit may attract other flies. Homes with large
shade trees are seldom attacked, presumably due to the cooler
exterior temperature of the house. Control measures include caulking
any openings to the interior (windows, doors, vents, etc.),
screening (fine mesh) vents, including air conditioner openings, and
taking care not to crush flies in the home, as this may attract more
flies. Dead flies should be swept or vacuumed up. Because flies
hibernate in inaccessible areas between walls, use of insecticides
inside buildings is generally unsuccessful. Fly populations, like
any other insect species, are susceptible to large increases and
decreases in numbers, and the problem may simply correct itself over
time.
By Steven
R. Alm, URI Entomologist, 1999

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