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Despite belonging to a group of winged insects, lice have secondarily lost their
wings in favour of a more passive form of transmission from host to host.
Most lice are transmitted by physical contact with mates during breeding to
ensure that the lice remaining on a suitable host species. Thus its been
said that lice are passed from one host generation to the next like genetic
heirlooms. However, a number of alternative possible mechanisms for
transmission exist, and perhaps the most famous of these involves the
louse-fly (Hippoboscidae).
These flies are frequently found around many birds and there are a number of reports of lice found attached to them,
particularly after the death of the host. This behavior by the lice is
known as phoresy and is in effect a risky process of redistribution in
which the lice get to travel freely on the flies without feeding on them.
There are many records of lice found attached to Hippoboscid flies,
although in almost all instances the lice concerned are members of the
suborder Ischnocera. This type of transmission allows the louse to escape
a dead or dying host in an attempt to find a more favourable host
environment. Nevertheless, there is a high element of risk in the process
as the flies are not specific to particular host species and are likely to
carry the lice to an unsuitable host on which they will be unable to
establish. This type of behaviour is important when studying the cospeciation of lice and their hosts as it could
provide an explanation for some of the instances in which lice have
switched from one host species to another during their coevolutionary
history.
Drawing copyright © 1952, Colins Publishers.
Title Illustration