WHY IS A HOUSEFLY AGILE AND DIFFICULT TO CATCH?

housefly on a leaf
The larvae of African fly (Polypedilum vanderplanki) turn into a mummified condition to survive severe drought.
Fly

A housefly has two tiny appendages called halteres, located behind each wing. Halteres help the housefly to right its course and remain stable if there is a disturbance during flight such a sudden gust of wind or abrupt change in the direction of flight. Halteres look like tiny drumsticks with a knob at the end. They move in the opposite direction to the wings, but at the same frequency.

According to the Encyclopedia of Adaptations of the Natural World, scientists have discovered that the halteres have numerous nerve-endings that detect twists and turns in the flight of a housefly and send the information to its brain so that it can take collective action.

A newly hatched female housefly is capable of reproduction within 2 to 3 days.
Housefly
A fly lives for 15 to 30 days, depending on the prevailing conditions.

The halteres act as cleverly designed gyroscopes—disc in which the axis is free to assume any direction—that help stabilize housefly’s flight and perform precise and complex aerial maneuvers. The difference between conventional gyroscopes and halteres is in their design: the latter looks like a pendulum.

Recent posts

Diploptera punctuate cockroach's milk offers four times more nutrients than a cow's milk.

August 10, 2018
Wolf spiders prefer green color shades because it is more comfortable for them to catch prey and mate against green backgrounds.

August 8, 2018
Wrens are songbirds found in Australia, which are able to learn the language of other neighbors. Researchers taught the birds to recognize two previously unknown sounds to them as distress calls by playing them in conjunction with the wrens' alarm call, which the wrens associated with danger. After three days, the birds run for cover when they heard the strange sound they learned.

August 5, 2018

August 1, 2018
A lizard can shed off its tail when in danger.

July 29, 2018
Wolf spiders that live in the Arctic tundra enjoy eating the springtails, but spiders lose appetite them during summer the temperatures are warmer. The springtails feed on fungus, which in turn decomposes melting land matter to form form carbon dioxide and methane. The two gases are responsible to global warming, which means that the more wolf spiders feed on alternative food sources the better for global warming.

July 27, 2018

Join us on social media or subscribe!

Sign up to receive our articles in your inbox!

Enter your name and email address below to subscribe.