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The House Fly and How to Suppress It - U. S. Department of Agriculture Farmers' Bulletin No. 1408 by L. O. Howard;F. C. Bishopp
page 8 of 31 (25%)
adult fly is 8 days, and 10 and 12 day records were very common.

The adult fly, upon emerging from the puparium, works its way upward
through the soil or manure and upon reaching the air it crawls about
while its wings expand and the body hardens and assumes its normal
coloration. In from 2 1/2 to 20 days, as previously stated, the female
is ready to deposit eggs. As in the case of other periods of its life
history, so the preoviposition period is prolonged considerably by the
lower temperatures of spring and fall. In midsummer, with a
developmental period of from 8 to 10 days from egg to adult, and a
preoviposition period of from 3 to 4 days, a new generation would be
started every 11 to 14 days. Thus the climate of the District of
Columbia allows abundance of time for the development of from 10 to 12
generations every season.

[Illustration: FIG. 7.--Pupæ of the house fly. About natural size.
(Newstead.)]

Flies usually remain near their breeding places if they have plenty of
food, but experiments recently made at Dallas, Tex., show that they may
migrate considerable distances; in fact, house flies, so marked that the
particular individuals could be identified, have been recaptured in
traps as far as 13 miles from the place where they were liberated.




HOW THE HOUSE FLY PASSES THE WINTER.


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