Narrow Banded Pond Fly and rat-tailed maggots
Sericomyia militaris - The narrow banded pond fly - its larvae are rat-tailed maggots Well, I learned something new today. I have known about a fly larva called a rat-tailed maggot and I knew about hover flies, but I did not know that rat-tailed maggots were the larvae of hover flies, also called flower flies. Now, not all flower flies have this kind of larvae, but those that belong to the group of syphids (family Syphidae) in the tribe Eristalini do. If you want to see a photo of a rat-tailed maggot, click here . The interesting thing about rat-tailed maggots is that they can thrive in polluted water. And we're not talking about mildly polluted water, but heavily polluted, stinks to high heaven, filthy, disgusting water. That's because they don't get their oxygen from the water, but rather from their "rat tail," which is a breathing tube that extends above the waterline. The water itself, which can actually be more of a mire, contains org...