- from
other parts of the
world where these animals are found. The term "
horse-
fly"
refers primarily to
Tabaninae that are
typically larger and stouter,...
- bands. They are
larger than the
common housefly and
smaller than the
horse-
fly. Deer
flies lay
between 100 and 800 eggs in
batches on
vegetation near...
- Tab**** lineola, also
known as the
striped horse fly, is a
species of
biting horse-
fly. It is
known from the
eastern coast of
North America and the Gulf...
-
pteron "wing".
Insects of this
order use only a
single pair of
wings to
fly, the
hindwings having evolved into
advanced mechanosensory organs known as...
- the mule deer,[1] the blood-feeding
female horse fly often lands on the head or face to feed. The
horse fly uses its scissor-like
mouthparts to cut the...
- Tab**** bovinus,
sometimes called the pale
giant horse-
fly, is a
species of
biting horse-
fly. As the
scientific name suggests, it
prefers bovine animals...
-
known as the dark
giant horsefly, is a
species of
biting horse-
fly. It is the
heaviest fly in Europe. The dark
giant horsefly's
length is
around 20-25...
-
commonly known as the
yellow fly in the
United States or
doctor fly in Belize, is a
species of
highly aggressive biting horse-
fly of the
family Tabanidae native...
-
gadfly in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Gadfly most
commonly refers to:
Horse fly or
botfly Gadfly (philosophy and
social science), a
person who upsets...
- The Rocking-
Horse-
Fly is an
insect from
Through the Looking-Gl**** and What
Alice Found There. Its name and form is a pun on the rocking-
horse. Its body...