vinegar fly
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- Animal Diversity Web - Drosophila melanogaster
- Australian Museum - Vinegar Fly
- Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation & Forestry - Vinegar flies
- Texas A&M University - Extension Entomology - Spotted wing drosophila
- Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet - Vinegar Flies
- National Center for Biotechnology Information - PubMed Central - Introduction: Drosophila—A Model System for Developmental Biology
- Also called:
- pomace fly or small fruit fly
- Related Topics:
- Drosophila
- On the Web:
- Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation & Forestry - Vinegar flies (Apr. 05, 2024)
vinegar fly, (genus Drosophila), any member of a genus in the small fruit fly family, Drosophilidae (order Diptera). Drosophila species number about 1,500. Some species, particularly D. melanogaster, are used extensively in laboratory and field experiments on genetics and evolution because they are easy to raise and have a short life cycle (less than two weeks at room temperature). More studies have been conducted concerning the genetics of the vinegar fly than have been obtained for any other animal. Drosophila chromosomes, especially the giant chromosomes found in the salivary glands of mature larvae, are used in studies involving heritable characteristics and the basis for gene action.
The biology of Drosophila in its natural habitats is not well known. The larvae of some species live in rotting or damaged fruits. In these species the adults are strongly attracted to, and feed on, fermenting plant juices. In other species the larvae develop in fungi or in fleshy flowers.