Flies
More
than 100 pathogens are associated with the house fly including: Salmonella,
Staphylococcus, E. coli and Shigella. These pathogens can cause disease
in humans and animals, including: typhoid fever, cholera, bacillary dysentery,
hepatitis, ophthalmia, polio, tuberculosis and infantile diarrhoea. Sanitation
is critical to controlling these pests, but accurate identification is
essential for success.
Here are some other things you should know about flies:
- The life expectancy of a fly is eight days to two
months.
- Flies belong to the Order Diptera.
- Flies plague every part of the world except the polar
ice caps.
- One pair of flies can produce more than one million
offspring in as little as six to eight weeks.
- As many as 33 million microorganisms may flourish
in a single fly's gut, while a half-billion more swarm over its body
and legs.
- Flies spread diseases readily because they move quickly
from rotting, disease-laden garbage to exposed foods and utensils.
- A fly deposits thousands of bacteria each time it
lands.
- For every fly seen, there are an estimated 19 more
hidden from view. This means humans don't even see 95 percent of flies
present at an infestation.
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