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Further records of distribution of blowflies in Great Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

John MacLeod
Affiliation:
Ministry of Agriculture Veterinary Laboratories, Weybridge.

Extract

The local blowflies were sampled by bait-trapping at a number of stations in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland and their western seaboard, the Western Isles and eastern and southern England, to supplement the results of an earlier survey of the distribution of Calliphorine blowflies in Great Britain.

Of the species of Lucilia, L. richardsi Collin was as numerous as L. scricata (Mg.) in the south-east, but relatively infrequent further north, and was not found in the Northwest Highlands or Islands. L. ampullacea Villen. and L. silvarum (Mg.), though earlier found in the eastern part of the Northwest Highlands, are rare or absent on the western seaboard and in the Western Isles. L. illustris (Mg.) is relatively infrequent in the Northwest Highlands and Islands, but in these regions was found as far north as Lairg, and in the Outer and Inner Hebrides.

Of the species of Calliphora, neither C. loewi End. nor C. uralensis Villen. were found in any of the eight stations in eastern and southern England. C. uralensis was common in the Western Isles and on the northwest seaboard. C. loewi more common in the Central Highlands and apparently absent from the Islands.

Acrophaga subalpina (Ringdahl) was not taken in the stations in the east and south of England, Cynomyia mortuorum (L.) only in the three more northerly of these, north and west of the Wash, and Phormia terraenovae R.-D. at onlv one station further south, Wye.

Type
Research Paper
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1963

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References

Macleod, J. & Donnelly, J. (1956). The geographical distribution of blowflies in Great Britain.—Bull. ent. Res. 47 pp. 597619.Google Scholar