Zhang Congcong, Gerry Alec C
Department of Entomology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521.
J Med Entomol. 2015 Jul;52(4):532-8. doi: 10.1093/jme/tjv042. Epub 2015 Apr 16.
"Canyon flies" are flies within the Fannia benjamini Malloch species complex. These flies can be considerable pests to humans and animals due to their habit of feeding on animal body secretions such as tears, mucus, sweat, and blood. Adult "canyon flies" (Fannia conspicua Malloch) were collected from the coastal mountain community of La Habra Heights in Los Angeles County, CA, during late spring and early summer of 2011. Canyon flies were colonized in the laboratory and maintained for over two years. Larval growth, sex-specific adult emergence, and fecundity were evaluated quantitatively. At 25°C, male flies required a minimum of 22 d postoviposition to develop from egg to adult, with peak emergence occurring at 24-26 d; female flies required a minimum of 25 d postoviposition, with peak emergence occurring at 26-28 d. Female flies were capable of oviposition starting at 7 d postemergence, and produced a mean of 90.6±54.7 eggs over a 19-41-d life span. Canyon fly eggs were quite resistant to desiccation, with hatching rate of eggs reduced only after ≥12 wk of desiccation, and some successful hatching even when eggs were desiccated up to 28 wk. When immature flies were removed from their food source and subjected to continuous desiccation and starvation, flies at 3-d-old posthatching did not survive, and only 8% of flies at 5-d posthatching survived and completed development to the adult stage. Immature flies that were 7- or 11-d-old posthatching survived to adulthood in good numbers, having reached the mid to late L3 stage at the time of food removal. Exposure to desiccation in either the egg or larval stage had no effect on fecundity of surviving females. This extreme level of desiccation tolerance is likely an adaptation to increase survival in desert climates of the southwestern United States with long, hot summers and little precipitation, where Fannia conspicua are typically distributed.
“峡谷蝇”属于本杰明氏厕蝇(Fannia benjamini Malloch)物种复合体中的蝇类。由于这些蝇类有取食动物身体分泌物(如眼泪、黏液、汗液和血液)的习性,它们对人类和动物来说可能是相当大的害虫。2011年春末和初夏期间,在加利福尼亚州洛杉矶县哈布拉高地的沿海山区群落采集到了成年“峡谷蝇”(显眼厕蝇Fannia conspicua Malloch)。峡谷蝇在实验室中定殖并维持了两年多。对幼虫生长、特定性别的成虫羽化和繁殖力进行了定量评估。在25°C条件下,雄蝇从卵发育到成虫产卵后至少需要22天,羽化高峰期出现在24 - 26天;雌蝇产卵后至少需要25天,羽化高峰期出现在26 - 28天。雌蝇在羽化后7天开始能够产卵,在19 - 41天的寿命期间平均产卵90.6±54.7枚。峡谷蝇卵对干燥具有很强的抵抗力,只有在干燥≥12周后卵的孵化率才会降低,甚至在卵干燥长达28周时仍有一些成功孵化。当将未成熟蝇从其食物源移除并使其持续干燥和饥饿时,孵化后3天的蝇无法存活,孵化后5天的蝇只有8%存活并发育到成虫阶段。孵化后7天或11天的未成熟蝇大量存活至成年,在食物移除时已达到L3中期至后期阶段。在卵期或幼虫期暴露于干燥环境对存活雌蝇的繁殖力没有影响。这种极高的耐干燥水平可能是一种适应性特征,以增加在美国西南部沙漠气候中的存活率,那里夏季漫长炎热且降水稀少,而显眼厕蝇通常分布于此。