Often confused with the common House Fly,
Cluster Flies are roughly the same size. Some characteristics that differentiate the Cluster
Fly: they fly somewhat more slowly than the House Fly, they almost always fly toward windows on
the warm side of a structure and their wings overlap almost completely, when at rest.
Cluster
Flies breed in the ground outside of buildings during the warm weather (late Spring into early
Summer) using earthworms as a food source for the immature larva (maggots). The
flies later pupate (go into the cocoon stage), then hatch as adult flies. In temperate
areas, often in late August, these flies begins to migrate indoors finding any small cracks or
crevices that permit entry into structures. These may include areas around window frames,
door frames or eaves. Entry tends to be on the
same, warm, sunny side (often the southern or western exposure) of the structure as the flies
later emerge from.
During the Fall, Winter or Spring months,
these flies may emerge, particularly on warm, sunny days. The flies appear at windows buzzing
and "clustering" around those areas to the dismay of the occupants. This fly can become a
problem in virtually any structure and they have, on occasion, been a problem in sensitive areas
such as hospitals, where they are especially unwelcome.