• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Human Botfly: Say Hello To The Parasite That Would Love To Get Under Your Skin

July 15, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

You scratch your hand and notice some faint irritation. There’s a small red bump on your skin, curiously close to where you swatted a mosquito just a few days ago. You prod it, and it moves. Congratulations, new parent, you’re officially with botfly!

Known to science as Dermatobia hominis, the human botfly can be found across Central and South America. A reasonably common parasite, botfly larvae have evolved to develop in human tissue. The adult fly is about the same size as a housefly, but avoiding them won’t keep you safe from their invading babies.

Botfly larvae

When a male and female botfly love each other very much, they’ll mate so that the female’s eggs are fertilized. Now, she has to find an unwitting babysitter to ferry her eggs to a human host, most often a blood-sucking insect like a mosquito or tick. In what must be a very confusing exchange for a mosquito, she will capture one and attach her eggs to its abdomen before letting it go. The mosquito flies off, and the female (presumably) dusts her tiny little hands together. Her job as a parent is done.

This reproductive strategy is what’s known as phoresy, and it hinges on an insect intermediate. When the mosquito lands on a human host, the warmth of their skin will trigger the eggs to hatch, releasing larvae that burrow in either via the puncture made by the mosquito, or through something like a hair follicle. 

Mosquitos, eh? Even when they don’t mean to be, they continue to be the worst.

human botfly with big red eyes resting on a leaf

The adult human botfly is technically harmless, but make no mistake – it has malice in its heart.

Image credit: MarcusVDT / Shutterstock.com

Botfly life cycle

This parasitization, while a bum deal for us humans, is a vital step in the botfly life cycle. The larvae will hang out in the skin getting fat on human tissues as they feed for around six weeks, safe inside their fleshy creche. If you want to know what that looks like (and we all know you secretly do), this entomologist grew botfly larvae in his arm and filmed it, so you’re in luck.

Once the botfly larva is ready to go out into the world, it creates a hole and wriggles out of its host, plopping onto the ground so that it can finish off in the soil and emerge once more in its adult fly form.

Botfly removal

Disgusting? Yes, but we’ve had plenty of time to get used to the unfortunate life cycle of human botflies. In their native range, parasitization from a human botfly isn’t all that uncommon, and the symptoms are easily recognizable.

The developing botfly forms what’s known as a warble that looks not unlike a pimple, only it will usually have a little hole in the middle. That’s where the larvae has stuck up its breathing tube like a snorkel so it can still get air.

Doctors prefer to remove the larvae themselves rather than letting nature take its course because botfly removal is the safer option. In cases where a larva has burrowed deep, minor surgery may be required, and removal can be made easier by applying something like Vaseline to the lump, effectively forcing the larva to come up for air as its breathing tube is blocked.

A critter that gets your neck up for sure, but you’ve got to admire the ingenious approach to parenting. The fly itself poses no threat to humans, as it’s only the poor mosquitoes that get roped into being delivery drivers that carry the eggs to our skin. Certainly a less energetically expensive option than waiting for your offspring to move out of your basement 40 years after giving birth to them.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer – Late goal gives Uruguay 1-0 win over Ecuador
  2. Analysis-Russia’s Gazprom feels the heat over Europe’s red-hot gas prices
  3. US Plans To Launch A Nuclear Reactor Into Space For The First Time Since The 1960s
  4. How Is Antarctica Melting, Exactly? Crucial Details Are Beginning To Come Into Focus

Source Link: Human Botfly: Say Hello To The Parasite That Would Love To Get Under Your Skin

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • In 40,000 Years, Voyager 1 Will Have A Close Encounter With Gliese 445
  • Abnormally Long Gamma Ray Burst Unlike Anything We’ve Seen Before Baffles Astronomers
  • Critically Endangered Shark Meat Is Being Sold In US Stores For As Little As $2.99
  • Infectious Mouth Bacteria Lurking In Artery Plaques Could Be Behind Some Heart Attacks
  • What Would You Reach If You Kept Digging Under Antarctica?
  • First Visible Time Crystals Ever Made Have Astonishing Complexity And Practical Potential
  • “Something Undeniably Special”: The Chi Cygnids, A New Five-Yearly Meteor Shower, Peak This Month
  • A 200-Meter-Tall Event We Didn’t See Sent Signals Through The Earth For Nine Whole Days
  • Why Are So Many Volcanoes Underwater?
  • In 1977, A Hybrid Was Born In A Zoo. What It Taught Us Could Save One Of The Planet’s Most Endangered Species
  • How To Park A Dangerous Asteroid So It Doesn’t Bite You Later
  • New Study Finds Evidence For What Every Parent Knows About Bluey
  • New Breakthrough Takes Plastic Garbage And Turns It Into Tool For Carbon Capture
  • NASA To Hold Press Conference About New Perseverance Rover Discovery Tomorrow
  • Strange Halos Have Formed Around Barrels Of Chemicals Dumped Off LA’s Coast Over 50 Years Ago
  • As We Grow Older, Our Music Taste Appears To Narrow To Fewer Songs
  • Stinky Seaweed Blob On Florida Beaches Thwarts Baby Sea Turtles’ Dash To The Ocean
  • NASA Is Set To Lock Up Four Volunteers For 378-Day Mars Simulation Study
  • For The First Time, A Vital Oceanic Upwelling Of Nutrient-Rich Water Failed To Emerge In 2025
  • One Of The Largest Crocs Ever “Terrorized Dinosaurs” With Teeth The Size Of Bananas
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version