Chrysomyinae
Guides
Chloroprocta
Chloroprocta is a genus of blow flies in the family Calliphoridae, subfamily Chrysomyinae. The genus was described by Wulp in 1896. Species in this genus are associated with carrion and decomposing organic matter. The genus contains relatively few described species and is primarily distributed in the Old World tropics and subtropics.
Chrysomya rufifacies
hairy maggot blow fly, hairy maggot blowfly
Chrysomya rufifacies is a blow fly native to Australasia and Southeast Asia that has become established across the Americas, Africa, and parts of Europe through human-mediated dispersal. It is one of the most forensically significant insects due to its highly predictable developmental timing and tendency to colonize human remains within minutes of death. The species exhibits facultative predation on other carrion-feeding larvae, which can alter postmortem succession patterns and confound time-of-death estimates. Adults are medium-sized with metallic blue-green coloration; larvae are distinguished by prominent fleshy tubercles that give the species its common name.
Trypocalliphora
Trypocalliphora is a genus of blow flies in the family Calliphoridae, subfamily Chrysomyinae. It was described by Peus in 1960. The genus contains at least one recognized species, Trypocalliphora braueri. Records indicate a distribution in northern Europe (including Norway and Sweden) and potentially Northern America, though documentation remains sparse.