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The seasonal distribution and characteristics of bush fly Musca vetustissima Walker populations in south-western Australia
Authors:J N MATTHIESSEN
Abstract:In the agricultural region of south-western Australia the bush fly Musca ventustissima Walker was found to occur permanently in the north-eastern half but it died out during winter in the south-west. The abundance of bush flies increased rapidly throughout the overwintering zone in early spring as a result of local breeding. Flies then dispersed south-westwards, completely repopulating the region during October. Immigrant flies were large and therefore highly fecund, and of advanced reproductive maturity. Local breeding then rapidly increased the population. Maximum abundance occurred in mid-spring in the north and east and in early summer in the south and west. Abundance was greatest in the north where large overwintering populations occurred, and in the far south where repopulation occurred early in the seasonal cycle of pasture growth so that the more favourable cattle dung produced flies that were more fecund than their immigrant parents. The abundance of bush flies declined throughout the region in summer, to negligible levels near the south-west coast but, paradoxically, higher levels occurred inland where there were fewer cattle. On average, flies were smaller and reproductively younger in summer. In areas where irrigated pastures produced more favourable dung in summer, the patterns of abundance and other characteristics of flies did not differ substantially from those in comparable non-irrigated areas. The abundance and other characteristics of a bush fly population 10 km from a cattle-grazing breeding site were similar to those at the site, indicating that constant dispersal is the basis of the bush fly's ubiquity.
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