Print this page
Tsetse FliesOwn Your Copy Today
Pathology
Diagnosis
Treatment and Control

The tsetse flies, Glossina spp , are important blood-feeding flies found in Africa (latitude 5°N to 20°S). Tsetse flies are narrow bodied, yellow to dark brown, and 6-13.5 mm long. When resting, their wings are held over the back in a scissor-like configuration. The thorax has a dull greenish color with inconspicuous spots or stripes. The abdomen is light to dark brown.
Both sexes are avid blood feeders. One copulation renders a female fly fertile for her lifetime, during which she can produce as many as 12 larvae. She produces 1 larva at a time, retaining it within her uterus; after ~10 days, the larva is deposited on loose, sandy soil, where it digs in and begins pupation within 60-90 min. This pupation period averages ~35 days, after which the adult emerges. Adult flies feed avidly on vertebrate blood about every 3 days.
Pathology:
Tsetse flies serve as the intermediate hosts for several species of trypanosomes that cause fatal diseases of both domestic animals (nagana) and humans (African sleeping sickness). Trypanosomes invade the blood, lymph, CSF, and various organs of the body, such as the liver and spleen. Nagana, a related complex in cattle caused by Trypanosoma brucei , has occurred over enormous areas estimated to be as great as one quarter of the African continent. The disease is fatal to horses, mules, camels, and dogs. Cattle, sheep, and goats usually survive, except when parasitized by certain strains. Many wild ungulates native to Africa show no evidence of harm. See also trypanosomiasis, .
Back to top
Diagnosis:
Tsetse flies can be identified by their honeybee-like appearance, the long proboscis with its onion-shaped bulb at its base, and the unique wing venation with the characteristic cleaver- or hatchet-shaped cell in the center of the wing.
Back to top
Treatment and Control:
Tsetse flies can be controlled by catching and trapping (tsetse traps), bush clearing, fly screens, repellents, insecticides, and sterile male release techniques.
Back to top

See Also
Introduction
Dipterans with Biting Mouthparts
Overview
Black Flies
Sand Flies
Biting Midges
Mosquitos
Horse Flies and Deer Flies
Stable Flies
Horn Flies
Buffalo Flies
Sheep Keds
Hippoboscid or Louse Flies
Dipterans with Nonbiting Mouthparts
Face Flies
Head Flies
Filth-breeding Flies
Eye Gnats
Dipterans that Produce Myiasis
Overview
Facultative Myiasis-producing Flies
Obligatory Myiasis-producing Flies
Overview
Cochliomyia hominivorax
Chrysomyia bezziana
Wolves (Warbles) of Small Animals
Gray Flesh Fly
African Tumbu Fly
Pseudomyiasis