Also known as horse-fly
Horse flies and deer flies are true flies in the family Tabanidae in the insect order Diptera. The adults are often large and agile in flight. Females parasitize land vertebrates, including humans, biting them to obtain blood. They prefer to fly in sunlight, avoiding dark and shady areas, and are inactive at night. They are found all over the world except for some islands and the polar regions (Hawaii, Greenland, Iceland). Both horse flies and botflies (Oestridae) are sometimes referred to as gadflies. Contrary to popular belief, horse flies can not see infrared light or otherwise detect heat
Tabanidae is a family of true flies that includes horse flies and deer flies, which are large, agile insects found worldwide except in polar regions and some islands. Female Tabanidae bite land vertebrates, including humans, to drink blood, and they are active during daylight hours but inactive at night.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
horse-flies
Tabanidae
FAMILY
屬 见内文 虻科(学名Tabanidae),又名馬蠅,是雙翅目下的一科,其中昆虫主要靠吸食哺乳動物的血液維生。 分类 根据ITIS,虻科分为: 下科Chrysopsinae: Merycomyia Chrysops Neochrysops Silvius 下科Pangoniinae: Apatolestes Asaphomyia Brennania Esenbeckia Pangonia Pegasomyia Stonemyia Goniops 下科Tabaninae: Anacimas Bolbodimyia Catachlorops Chlorotabanus Diachlorus Dichelacera Holcopsis Lepiselaga Leucotabanus Microtabanus Stenotabanus Haematopota Agkistrocerus Atylotus Hamatabanus Hybomitra Poeciloderas Tabanus Whitneyomyia 未分下科 Zophina 规范控制 NDL: 00560045 这是一篇與昆虫相關的小作品。你可以通过编辑或修订扩充其内容。 查 论 编 取自“https://zh.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=虻&oldid=36580251” 分类: 双翅目 害蟲 吸血 隐藏分类: 本地相关图片与维基数据相同 包含NDL标识符的维基百科条目 全部小作品 昆虫小作品
via GBIF
Horse flies and deer flies are true flies in the family Tabanidae in the insect order Diptera. The adults are often large and agile in flight. Females parasitize land vertebrates, including humans, biting them to obtain blood. They prefer to fly in sunlight, avoiding dark and shady areas, and are inactive at night. They are found all over the world except for some islands and the polar regions (Hawaii, Greenland, Iceland). Both horse flies and botflies (Oestridae) are sometimes referred to as gadflies. Contrary to popular belief, horse flies can not see infrared light or otherwise detect heat at a distance.
Adult horse flies feed on nectar and plant exudates; males have weak mouthparts, but females have mouthparts strong enough to puncture the skin of large animals. This is for the purpose of obtaining enough protein from blood to produce eggs. The mouthparts of females are formed into a stout stabbing organ with two pairs of sharp cutting blades, and a spongelike part used to lap up the blood that flows from the wound. The larvae are predaceous and grow in semiaquatic habitats.
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via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).