WSU Extension

Pestsense

Nuisance
 
Bagworms
Brown marmorated stink bug
Centipedes
Clover mites
Cluster flies
Cockroaches
Firebrats
Fruit flies
Fungus gnats
Giant house spider
Hobo spider
House centipede
House dust mites
House flies
Little house flies
Mice and rats
Millipedes
Moth flies (drain flies)
Multi-colored Asian lady beetle
Odorous house ants
Pavement ants
Pseudoscorpions
Root weevils
Seed bugs
Silverfish
Sowbugs and pillbugs
Spiders (non-biting)
Springtails
Thatching ants
Western boxelder bug



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Caption: Cluster Fly
Photo by: Ken Gray
  
Cluster flies
(revision date: 7/14/2015)

Use Integrated Pest Management (IPM) for successful pest management.

Biology
Cluster flies resemble house flies, but are larger and slower in movements. They are about 5/16 inch long, dark gray with black and gray checkered abdomens. Cluster fly larvae or maggots are parasites of earthworms. This makes managing breeding sites an unlikely control option since earthworms are almost everywhere. The adults seek overwintering sites indoors (attics, wall voids, etc.) making them a nuisance pest. In the spring they migrate from their overwintering sites to human living spaces such as bedrooms, kitchens, living rooms, and windows, etc., becoming an unbearable nuisance.
Management Options

Non-Chemical Management
  • Maintain effective, tightly-fitting window and door screens.
  • Screen vents to attics and crawl spaces with a mesh size small enough to prevent adult entry.
  • Remove space under wall siding and around window and door frames. Caulking and sealing these areas helps to prevent adult entry.
Select non-chemical management options as your first choice!

Chemical Management

Be sure to address the adult fly entry places around the home mentioned above. Killing adults with sprays won’t make the problem go away- they’ll be back again next year.

Images

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Caption: Cluster Fly
Photo by: Ken Gray