Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T18:34:54.506Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Interactions Between Camargue horses and horseflies (Diptera: Tabanidae)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

R. D. Hughes
Affiliation:
CSIRO Division of Entomology, Canberra, A.C.T., Australia
P. Duncan
Affiliation:
Station Biologique de la Tour du Valat, Le Sambuc, Arles, France
J. Dawson
Affiliation:
CSIRO Division of Mathematics and Statistics, Canberra, A.C.T., Australia

Abstract

In the Camargue in southern France, catches of tabanids in a Manitoba trap in 1976–78 gave seasonal, daily and hourly records of numbers. Concurrently, some interactions of the flies with a group of free-ranging horses were observed directly. The tabanids were present from May to October annually, with the main peak of abundance between late May and early July. The number trapped in each hour of the day increased with the ambient temperature in the morning, was stable during the hottest time of the day and declined in the late afternoon. Their alighting on a horse always elicited reactions aimed at dislodging them. When tabanids became very abundant and active, the horses would move as a group from where they were feeding to a traditional open bare area (‘chomadou’) where they would stay without feeding, sometimes for hours, even though large numbers of tabanids were still worrying them. Analyses of data on an index of the abundance of tabanids on or about the horses in a group showed the horses did not reduce the fly load by moving to and resting on their chomadou area. The number of responses by a horse to the tabanids on or about it was shown to be dependent not only on the number of flies but on their activity. Analysis of the responses revealed a negative effect of wind speed on the activity component which was separate from its known negative effect on the number of flies present. A hypothesis is proposed that movement to the chomadou can be explained as the horses going to an area ‘known’ to be usually exposed to the prevailing wind.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bassett, P. A. (1978). The vegetation of a Camargue pasture.—J. Ecol. 66, 803827.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burnett, A. M. & Hays, K. L. (1974). Some influences of meteorological factors on flight activity of female horse flies (Diptera: Tabanidae).—Environ. Entomol. 3, 515521.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chvála, M., Lyneborg, L. & Moucha, J. (1972). The horse flies of Europe (Diptera, Tabanidae).—499 pp. Copenhagen. Ent. Soc. Copenhagen.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duncan, P. & Cowtan, P. M. (1980). An unusual choice of habitat helps Camargue horses to avoid blood-sucking horse flies.—Biol. Behav. 5, 5560.Google Scholar
Duncan, P. & Vigne, N. (1979). The effect of group size in horses on the rates of attack by blood-sucking flies.—Anim. Behav. 27, 623625.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geiger, R. (1965). The climate near the ground. (Translated from 4th German edition).— 611 pp. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Jaworoska, M. (1976). Verhaltensbeobachtungen an primitiven polnischen Pferden die in einem polnischen Waldschutzgebiet—in Freheit lebenderhalten werden.—Säugetier kdl. Mitt. 24, 241268.Google Scholar
Morton, R., Tuart, L. D. & Wardhaugh, K. G. (1981). The analysis and standardisation of light-trap catches of Heliothis armiger (Hübner) and H. punctiger Wallengren (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae).—Bull. ent. Res. 71, 207225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, P. H. (1969). Collecting methods for Tabanidae (Diptera).—Ann. ent. Soc. Am. 62, 5057.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thorsteinson, A. J., Bracken, G. K. & Hanec, W. (1965). The orientation behaviour of horse flies and deer flies (Tabanidae, Diptera). III. The use of traps in the study of orientation of tabanids in the field.—Entomologia exp. appl. 8, 189192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tyler, S. J. (1972). The behaviour and social organisation of the New Forest ponies.— Anim. Behav. Monogr. 5, 85196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wells, S. M. & Von Goldschmidt-Rothschild, B. (1979). Social behaviour and relationships in a herd of Camargue horses.—Z. Tierpsychol. 49, 363380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar