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Integumentary System
Flies
Overview of Flies
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Sections in Veterinary Professionals
  • Behavior
  • Circulatory System
  • Clinical Pathology and Procedures
  • Digestive System
  • Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
  • Endocrine System
  • Exotic and Laboratory Animals
  • Eye and Ear
  • Generalized Conditions
  • Immune System
  • Integumentary System
  • Management and Nutrition
  • Metabolic Disorders
  • Musculoskeletal System
  • Nervous System
  • Pharmacology
  • Poultry
  • Reproductive System
  • Respiratory System
  • Toxicology
  • Urinary System
  • Zoonoses
Chapters in Integumentary System
  • Integumentary System Introduction
  • Congenital and Inherited Anomalies of the Integumentary System
  • Atopic Dermatitis
  • Food Allergy
  • Urticaria
  • Dermatophilosis
  • Exudative Epidermitis
  • Interdigital Furunculosis
  • Pyoderma
  • Contagious Ecthyma
  • Pox Diseases
  • Ulcerative Dermatosis of Sheep
  • Dermatophytosis
  • Cattle Grubs
  • Cuterebra Infestation in Small Animals
  • Fleas and Flea Allergy Dermatitis
  • Flies
  • Helminths of the Skin
  • Lice
  • Mange
  • Ticks
  • Tumors of the Skin and Soft Tissues
  • Acanthosis Nigricans
  • Eosinophilic Granuloma Complex
  • Hygroma
  • Miscellaneous Systemic Dermatoses
  • Nasal Dermatoses of Dogs
  • Parakeratosis
  • Photosensitization
  • Pityriasis Rosea in Pigs (Porcine juvenile pustular psoriaform dermatitis)
  • Saddle Sores
  • Seborrhea
Topics in Flies
  • Overview of Flies
  • Dipterans with Biting Mouthparts
  • Black Flies
  • Sand Flies
  • Biting Midges
  • Mosquitoes
  • Horse Flies and Deer Flies
  • Stable Flies
  • Horn Flies
  • Buffalo Flies
  • Tsetse Flies
  • Sheep Keds
  • Hippoboscid or Louse Flies
  • Dipterans with Nonbiting Mouthparts
  • Face Flies
  • Head Flies
  • Filth-breeding Flies
  • Eye Gnats
  • Dipterans that Produce Myiasis
  • Facultative Myiasis-Producing Flies
  • Obligatory Myiasis-Producing Flies
  • Pseudomyiasis
 
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Overview of Flies

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Flies belong to the order Diptera, a large, complex order of insects. Most members of this order have 2 wings (1 pair) as adults. However, there are a few wingless dipterans. Dipterans vary greatly in size, food source preference, and in the developmental stage that parasitizes the animal or produces pathology. As adults, dipterans may intermittently feed on vertebrate blood or on saliva, tears, or mucus. These dipterans are referred to as periodic parasites and may serve as intermediate hosts for helminth parasites or for protozoan parasites. They may also serve as vectors for bacteria, viruses, spirochetes, chlamydiae, etc. As larvae, dipterans may develop in the subcutaneous tissues of the skin, respiratory passages, or GI tract of vertebrate hosts and produce a condition known as myiasis.

Last full review/revision July 2011 by Charles M. Hendrix, DVM, PhD

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