The 'bone-skipper', or Centrophlebomyia anthropophaga if you're in a scientific mood, once developed quite a reputation for eating human remains. Not fresh remains, mind you. These flies prefer bodies in advanced stages of decomposition.
Thankfully, their diet isn't exclusively human. Bone-skippers love to pick over large animals, and researchers believe they flourished several centuries ago when those animals were more plentiful.
Incidentally, the flies are nicknamed bone-skippers because of the manner in which they skip along the bones of a decaying body, making it look "alive with larvae". My, what a beautiful image.
Bone-skippers supposedly disappeared about 160 years ago, and achieved near-mythical status in the scientific community. Yes, they have myths about flesh-eating flies.
But to nobody's great delight, the flies have recently been rediscovered in Europe, LiveScience reports.
Pierfilippo Carretti, a researcher at the Sapienza University of Rome and presumably the most Italian man alive, has worked with his colleagues to establish a "type-species" for the fly. That's the super-long scientific name mentioned above, and it allows researchers to classify and study the species with greater ease.
You can read all about Centrophlebomyia anthropophaga in Carretti's study here.
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