Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 April 2009
When egg-masses of Lucilia illustris, taken from carcasses, were mounted on the body of living vertebrates (Clarius batrachus, Bufo melanostictus, Rana tigrina, Hemidactylus fluviviridis, Columba livia and Suncus murinus), the larvae hatched in the majority of cases under normal conditions of room temperature, and entered into the body of the experimental hosts, ultimately killing them. It appeared that the larvae fed on the brain first before turning their attention to other soft tissues of the hosts. The specimens fed on living tissue had a shorter period of development than those bred on dead animals and the period of development was shortest when the host was a living warm-blooded animal.
Thanks are due to Mr H. Oldroyd of the British Museum of Natural History, London, for kindly identifying the fly. The authors also wish to thank Dr T. N. Ghosh of the Calcutta School of Tropical Medicine, who helped with literature; and Dr S. K. Das Gupta, of the Darjeeling Government College, who helped with suggestions at the time of preparing the manuscript.