dcsimg

Tabanus bovinus, Pale Giant Horsefly

Image of pale giant horse-fly

Description:

Tabanus bovinus, sometimes called the pale giant horse-fly, is a species of biting horse-fly. As the name suggests, it prefers bovine animals as the source of blood, although it may bite other kind of mammals as well. The insect is relatively large for a horse-fly, adults usually being 2530 mm long. Like most other horseflies, its compound eyes are very colorful with stripe-like patterns. Its body and wings are mostly colored brownish gray. It is quite fast and an able flier, being capable of evading most attempts to swat it with ease. It bites humans infrequently, because of its preference of bovine animals. This loud-buzzing horse-fly can be a nuisance, as it circles around its target and occasionally lands to deliver a bite (in the case of humans, the fly usually takes off again instead). However, to humans it is considerably less harmful than deer flies (Chrysops), which bite much more vigorously.

Source Information

license
cc-by-nc-2.0
copyright
Macroscopic Solutions
photographer
Macroscopic Solutions
original
original media file
visit source
partner site
Flickr Group
ID
c92870fad7fd2a631c1f225b3b7c3c8b