Cluster flies are common in the loft and attic spaces of homes and business premises.
Flies in attic of the house.
Cluster fly larvae develop inside earthworms living in the ground outside of homes.
Naturally your house is warmer.
Cluster flies do not reproduce indoors and home owners bothered by these pests do not need to fear the flies are hatching from a dead animal or other unpleasant material within the attic or walls.
Overwintering insects generally stay in secluded areas until the warming and lengthening days of spring pull them from hiding.
Thus the common name they have of attic flies.
Cluster flies cluster those large flies in your home in winter are probably cluster flies which overwinter in the protected areas between the inside and outside walls of your home or in the attic or basement.
Cluster or attic flies are the genus pollenia in the blowfly family calliphoridae.
Most commonly they move from the ground to your attic for the winter when it gets cold.
Cluster flies are capable of crawling through small openings in the walls of a structure.
Cluster flies come from the calliphoridae family.
Cluster flies in the attic cluster flies get their common name from their habit of forming compact clusters typically in wall voids and attics.
Place your light traps approximately 4 6 feet 1 2 1 8 meters above the floor.
Attic flies which are also known as cluster flies are insects that often migrate into homes in the fall where they hibernate for the cooler fall and winter months.
Position light traps so that they are not be visible from outside your house so that the light does not lure new flies into your home.
Cluster flies are also known as attic flies.
These flies enter homes looking for overwintering sites during the cold months.
These flies are known as cluster flies a name that describes their habit of clustering in large numbers inside attics.
They are widely distributed in the united states except for the states bordering the gulf of mexico.
Flies are lured in by the light and then trapped on a glue board or killed by an electric shock.
This is the same family to which bottle or blow flies belong.
By instinct they seek shelter away from the elements such as in the fall when it gets cold.
A cluster fly is very much similar to a house fly.
Cluster flies prefer warm areas so homeowners often find them flying around houses on sunny days in the winter and late fall months.
And the easiest entrance is usually through external gaps leading to your attic.