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He did not even mean mosquitoes; August is deer fly season.
A distinguishing characteristic of a deer fly is patterned gold or green eyes.
While female deer flies feed on blood, males instead collect pollen.
Next come strawberry flies, then the deer flies and the gnats.
Horse flies and deer flies can bite people and animals.
A summer plague of green-eyed deer flies raises welts on bare skin.
"One good thing about it is that it's so tiny the deer flies haven't discovered it yet.
The deer flies are simply terrible.
The primary vectors are ticks and deer flies, but the disease can also be spread through other arthropods.
Hikers should also come with insect repellent in the summer, as deer flies, ticks, and mosquitoes are common.
Black fly, mosquito, deer fly, and midge populations can be significant from late spring through early autumn.
The larvae of the splayed deer fly feed upon algae and organic matter in damp muddy soils.
However, to humans it is considerably less harmful than deer flies (Chrysops), which bite much more vigorously.
The abdomen shows distinct black inverted-V marking (hence the common name of "splayed" deer fly).
Deer flies are a genus that belongs to the family commonly called horse-flies (Tabanidae).
Rather, tularemia is caused by contact with infected animals or vectors such as ticks, mosquitos, and deer flies.
Tularemia can also be transmitted by biting flies, particularly the deer fly Chrysops discalis.
Merycomyia is a genus of North American deer flies in the family Tabanidae.
Loa loa's vector is the deer fly; daytime collection is preferred.
Insects swarmed the area , and the men were constantly assaulted by mosquitoes, deer flies and other annoying, biting pests.
Loa loa is another filarial parasite transmitted by the deer fly.
Has No Horse traveled east along the Oregon Trail to meet his uncle, Deer Fly and borrow soldiers from him.
The drawbacks, though, are pesky, persistent deer flies and deer, which ate nearly all her husband's prize rose bushes before he built an electric fence around them.
The deer flies clustered on the horses' sweaty necks, and Trixie and Honey were kept busy brushing 139 138 them off with evergreen branches.
Chrysops caecutiens, common name splayed deer fly, is a species of horse fly belonging to the family Tabanidae.
However, to humans it is considerably less harmful than deer flies (Chrysops), which bite much more vigorously.
Eleutherodactylus chrysops is a species of frog in the Leptodactylidae family.
Philaeus chrysops is a species of jumping spider (Salticidae).
Eleutherodactylus chrysops.
Pangoniinae, except the genus Chrysops.
A simian type of loiasis exists in monkeys and apes but it is transmitted by Chrysops langi.
Deer flies/Yellow flies (Chrysops)
Oncidium chrysops (Mexico - Guerrero, Oaxaca).
Morone chrysops (Rafinesque, 1820)
Chrysops caecutiens, common name splayed deer fly, is a species of horse fly belonging to the family Tabanidae.
Chrysops, Diachlorus, and Tabanus spp.
Produced in hatcheries, the most common hybridization is the female striped bass Morone saxatilis and the male white bass M. Chrysops.
Species in the genus Chrysops are biological vectors of Loa loa, transmitting this parasitic filarial worm between humans.
Oldroyd, H. 1952: A new Chrysops (Diptera, Tabanidae) from the British Cameroons.
During a blood meal, an infected fly (genus Chrysops, day-biting flies) introduces third-stage filarial larvae onto the skin of the human host, where they penetrate into the bite wound.
Although horseflies of the Tabanus genus are often mentioned as Loa vectors, the two prominent vector are from the Chrysops genus of tabanids-C.
A related fly, Chrysops langi, has been isolated as a vector of simian loiasis, but this variant hunts within the forest and has not as yet been associated with human infection.
The young larvae develop in horseflies of the genus Chrysops (deer flies, yellow flies), including the species C. dimidiata and C. silacea, which infect humans by biting them.
The vector for Loa loa filariasis are flies from two hematophagous species of the genus Chrysops (deer flies), C. silacea and C. dimidiata.
Deer flies (also known as yellow flies, or stouts in Atlantic Canada) are flies in the genus Chrysops of the family Tabanidae that can be pests to cattle, horses, and humans.
Natural hybridization has been occurring for thousands of years between the species, but it is usually the reverse cross which would be male saxatilis x female chrysops since the white bass eggs do not require the same degree of flotating to hatch.
Due to its mechanical transmission T. evansi is not restricted to transmission via the tsetse fly but shows a very broad vector specificity including the genera Tabanus, Stomoxys, Haematopota, Chrysops and Lyperosia.
A study of Chrysops spp biting habits showed that C. silacea and C. dimidiata take human blood meals approximately 90% of the time, with hippopatomus, wild ruminant, rodent, and lizard blood meals making up the other 10%.
It has been shown that the Chrysops vector has a limited flying range, but vector elimination efforts are not common, likely because the insects bite outdoors and have a diverse, if not long, range, living in the forest and biting in the open, as mentioned in the vector section.
The cycle of infection continues when a non-infected mango or deer fly takes a blood meal from a microfilaremic human host, and this stage of the transmission is possible due to the combination of the diurnal periodicity of microfilaria and the day-biting tendencies of the Chrysops spp.