734 The Living Animals of the World 



The RoBRER-FLiES are large flies, with long, tapering bodies, of a black or partly yellow 

 colour, and feed on smaller flies and other insects of different kinds. They have very thick, 

 hairy legs, and a strong proboscis. A handsome Australian species, allied to these, but with a 

 broader body, is represented in the Coloured Plate. 



The Hornet Kobbek-fly, represented on page 731, is one of the most conspicuous of 

 the British species. Among other pjlaces, it may be seen flying over the short grass at the 

 top of the cliffs between Brighton and Rottingdean. They are very predaceous, and are 

 probably rather beneficial than otherwise, by contributing to keep down injurious insects. 

 But in North America there is a species called the Bee-killer, which is an extremely 

 destructive insect, taking up its station in front of a hive, and killing large numbers of bees 

 as they fly backwards and forwards from the hive. 



The Ho\'EK-FLiES are brightly coloured, rather smooth flies, and are familiar objects in 

 gardens, and in open places in woods. They have the habit of hovering motionless in the 

 air, and then darting ofi' suddenly. Some of the larger species proceed from curious maggots, 

 with long tails, which have been compared to the tail of a rat. These live in putrid water; 

 and as the flies have a slight resemblance to bees, the fact is believed to have given rise to 

 the old fable that liees are generated from the rotting carcases of oxen or other large animals. 



The Bot-flies are remarkable for being parasitic on warm-blooded animals, their maggots 

 living in tumours on the skin of oxen, known as " warbles," or in the stomach and intestines 



of horses, or in the nostrils and other cavities in the heads of 



■ '' ' ' ■ ■' ' ' ■ sheejJ or deer. 



The House-flies and their allies form a very large group, 



^W^^.;,,, divided into many families. The true house-fly is an autumn 



' ■•' .r^SBj^' ■ insect; but there are other flies which resemble it which live 



^Hp in houses at difi'erent times of the year. Most of them are 



harmless, although there is one species, very like a house-fly, 



which comes into houses in rainy weather, and inflicts a 



Fhuio 1^', ir. J'. jj,„„i„ F.y..ti jkn.nr^pari: puucture like a gad-fly. This is the meaning of the popular 



BLUE-BOTTLE FLY, OR BLOW-FLY. laying that "the flies bite in rainy weather." 



This phctogr.ipi, shows the «ii,g,s expanded. Although house-flies do not bite, yet they are sometimes 



exceedingly troublesome when they are in unusual numbers ; 

 and as they settle everywhere, they may convey infection mechanically, though not as the 

 principal agents in the dissemination of definite diseases, like the mosijuitoes. Thus, in Egypt, 

 they are said frequently to convey ophthalmia, a very prevalent disease in that countrv. 



The very first paper published in the " Transactions of the present Entomological Society 

 of London " (for the existing Society had several short-lived predecessors) was a paper read by 

 William Spence at the meeting on April 7, 1834, about a year after the Society had been 

 definitely founded, entitled " Observations on a Mode practised in Italy of excluding the 

 Common House-fly from Apartments." This desirable result is attained simply by stretching 

 a net of white or coloured thread, with meshes of an inch or more in diameter, across an 

 open window, which the flies will not venture to pass, if the room is lighted from one side 

 only— "for if there be a thorourjh light either from an opposite or side window, the flies pass 

 through the net without scruple." Mr. Speiice's son also referred to a passage in Herodotus 

 where he says that Egyptian fishermen in his time defended themselves from the gnats by 

 covering their beds with the nets which they had used in the day for fishing, and through 

 which these insects, though they bit through linen or woollen, did not even attempt to bite. 

 The matter seems to liave been overlooked in recent years, though it is evidently well worthy 

 of consideration when flies or gnats are troublesome. 



There is a conspicuous insect allied to the house-flies, but a little larger, measuring about 

 half an inch in length. It is called the Noon-day Fly, and is often seen in considerable 

 numbers, in the hottest part of the day, flying round and settling on the trunks and leaves 

 of trees ; it also settles on cow-dung. It is a shining black fly, with the sides and under surface 



