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Family Muscidae
This page contains pictures and information about Bush Flies that we found in the Brisbane area, Queensland, Australia.

- Body length 5mm
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- We usually found them rest on leaves in dense forest.
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- We received the email from Susan Walter and
advised that "I think your mystery Blue Fly is a muscid. It is a calyptrate fly, as you can see the thoracic suture. Some male muscids have those very large red eyes and because of the metallic sheen, I am thinking that
may be it is something like Ophyra sp. I'm afraid these rejoice under the common name of Black Garbage Flies or Dump Flies, so that gives you an idea of where they like to breed. They also breed in dung. As well as resting in the shade, did you also notice them persistently hovering in shafts of sunlight? That is another characteristic of this muscid genera and also the rather similar Fannia (which is sometimes listed as Muscidae and sometimes given its own family of Fannidae). Fannia are less metallic though. From these photos, I don't think anyone will be able to give you an ID to species level. You may already know this, but the photo top right is of a female and the one bottom left is male."
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- Reference:
- 1. A field guide to insects in Australia - By Paul Zborowski and Ross Storey, Reed New Holland, 1996,
p146.
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