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  2. Definition, Life Cycle, Habitat, & Classification - Britannica

    • dipteran, (order Diptera), any member of an order of insects containing the two-winged or so-called true flies. Although many winged insects are commonly called flies, the name is strictly applicable only to … See more

    General features

    Flies range in size from midges of little more than 1 mm to robber flies more than 7 cm long. In … See more

    Britannica
    Importance

    The abundance, worldwide distribution, and habits of flies combine to make them a nuisance to humans. Swarms of midges are a common annoyance. Sweat flies and face flies g… See more

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  1. Common names for members of the order Diptera include1234:
    • Gnats
    • Midges
    • Mosquitoes
    • Flies (including horse flies, houseflies, blow flies, fruit flies, bee flies, robber flies, and crane flies)
    Learn more:
    Dipterans are known by such common names as gnats, midges, mosquitoes, and leaf miners, in addition to numerous sorts of flies, including the horse fly, housefly, blow fly, and fruit, bee, robber, and crane flies.
    www.britannica.com/animal/fly-insect
    Flies, gnats, maggots, midges, mosquitoes, keds, bots, etc. are all common names for members of the order Diptera.
    diptera.myspecies.info/diptera/content/introduction …
    The common names of the members of order Diptera are written as two words: crane fly, robber fly, bee fly, moth fly, fruit fly, etc. The common names of non-dipterans that have "fly" in their name are written as one word: butterfly, stonefly, dragonfly, scorpionfly, sawfly, caddisfly, whitefly, etc.
    bugguide.net/node/view/55
    Order Diptera COMMON NAME: FLIES Flies differ from other insects by having only two true wings. The hind pair is reduced to small, club-like organs called halteres. A few flies, such as the sheep ked, are wingless. Many flies, including mosquitoes and horse flies, have piercing-sucking mouthparts.
    entomology.k-state.edu/outreach-and-services/4-h/…
     
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  4. Order Diptera – ENT 425 – General Entomology

    WEBCommon Name: True Flies / Mosquitoes / Gnats / Midges. Greek Origins of Name: Diptera, derived from the Greek words “di” meaning two and “ptera” meaning wings, refers to the fact that true flies have only a single pair of …

  5. Order Diptera - Flies - BugGuide.Net

  6. Biology of Diptera - Wikipedia

  7. Characteristics of dipteran and their importance

    WEBdipteran , Any member of the more than 120,000 species in the insect order Diptera (the two-winged, or “true,” flies), characterized by the use of only one pair of wings for flight and the reduction of the second pair of wings …

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  8. Dipteran - Insects, Flies, Mosquitoes | Britannica

  9. Diptera - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

  10. Flies (Order: Diptera) - Amateur Entomologists' …

    WEBThe Diptera are familiar to everyone as just 'flies' - such as house flies and blue bottles - and this order of insects also includes daddy long legs, midges and mosquitoes. Most flying insects - the Pterygota - have four …

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  11. Diptera - Royal Entomological Society

    WEBIn general the Diptera are easy to recognise as a group, with only a single pair of functional wings and the hind wings modified into halteres, used as balancing organs during flight. Many families are extremely familiar to …

  12. Introduction to the order Diptera | The Diptera Site

  13. Major Groupings of Diptera - Tree of Life Web Project

  14. Typical Flies: Natural History, Lifestyle and Diversity of Diptera

  15. Order Diptera - Kansas State University

  16. Diptera - flies, mosquitoes

  17. Diptera Family Descriptions - University of British Columbia

  18. Diptera Definition, Characteristics & Examples | Study.com

  19. True Flies (Diptera) - Smithsonian Institution

  20. The Characteristics of Diptera - ThoughtCo

  21. Fly | Definition, Features, & Types | Britannica - Encyclopedia …

  22. Calliphoridae - Wikipedia

  23. Hover fly | Predator, Pollinator & Mimic | Britannica

  24. Chironomidae - Wikipedia