Oestroidea
Oestroidea is a superfamily of Calyptratae that includes the blow flies, bot flies, flesh flies, and their relatives. It occurs worldwide and has about 15,000 described species.The earliest known fossil of Oestroidea is of a Mesembrinellidae found in Dominican amber from the Miocene. The Oestroidea in general are believed to have originated 48.2 million years ago.
The superfamily includes the families:
- Calliphoridae
- Mesembrinellidae
- Mystacinobiidae
- Oestridae
- Polleniidae
- Rhiniidae
- Sarcophagidae
- Tachinidae
- Ulurumyiidae
Historically, Oestroidea was considered the sister group to Muscoidea. A 2012 molecular analysis placed Oestroidea within a paraphyletic Muscoidea, and also confirmed the monophyly of Oestroidea and of most of its families. Morphological and molecular analyses in 2017 yielded overall similar results. Relationships among the families and subfamilies within Oestroidea are complicated and not well resolved.Ecology
Oestroidea have a wide range of feeding habits and breeding environments: saprophagous, feeding on blood of birds or mammals, parasites of gastropods or earthworms, parasitoids of arthropods, living in association with termites or ants, and commensals of bats. Various species of Calliphoridae, Oestridae and Sarcophagidae have larvae that parasitise vertebrates, causing myiasis.Forensic entomology
Many species of Oestroidea are of forensic importance due to feeding on decomposing animals, including humans.