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Continuous Propagation of the Horn Fly, Haematobia irritons (L.) (Diptera: Muscidae)1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

K. R. Depner
Affiliation:
Research Station, Canada Department of Agriculture, Lethbridge, Alberta

Extract

The horn fly, Haematobia irritans (L.), has not been propagated previously in the laboratory beyond the first generation. It has not been difficult to obtain eggs from gravid wild flies, nor to rear rhem through to thc adult stage. However, a chemically defined diet that will promote ovary developrrient in reared adults has not been developed, although previous attempts at this laboratory (McLintock and Depner, 1957) showed that preserved blood is satisfactory as a diet to keep flies alive. Furthermore, the lack of sperm in the spermathecae of the females indicated that flies confined in various types of containers away from the host did not mate. Partial development of the ovarics of flies fed on a cow indicated that the method most likely to succeed was one in which flies were allowed to remain on the host.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1962

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References

Depner, K. R. 1961. The effect of temperature on development and diapause in the horn fly Siphona irritans (L.) (Diptera: Muscidae). Can. Entom. 93: 855859.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McLintock, J., and Depner, K. R.. 1957. Preliminary attempts to establish a laboratory colony of the horn fly, Siphona irritans (L.) (Diptera: Muscidae). J. Parasitol. 43: 209212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar