Mitten feet
This is one of my “Know your pest predators” posts, featuring one of our PNW flies. Flies are all too often maligned and under-appreciated. We think of flies as spreading disease and being a nuisance, yet many of them perform incredibly important jobs as pollinators and pest predators. Yesterday I was sleuthing flies in the yard and found these metallic green beauties. Here is a Dolichopus (“doe-LICK-uh-pus”) male and female. The “dolicho-“ part means “long”, and the “-pus/-pod” part means “leg” or “foot.”
Some species of Dolichopus males (like this one) have little “flags ” or “mitten” front feet they wave or flap around to woo the ladies. Reading about this very large group of flies has been interesting and you can learn more about their courtship behaviors in Van DuZee et al. (1921).

These flies are predators of small, soft-bodied invertebrates as adults and during their larval stage. You can thank them for helping keep populations of aphids under control in your garden.

You’ll find these flies in northern latitudes in North America. “Dolichopus species are among the largest and most common members of the family Dolichopodidae in North America. The majority of Dolichopus species prefer humid habitats and some are restricted to saltmarshes,” (Pollet et al. 2004).


References:
MARC A.A. POLLET, SCOTT E. BROOKS, JEFFREY M. CUMMING. 2004. “CATALOG OF THE DOLICHOPODIDAE (DIPTERA) OF AMERICA NORTH OF MEXICO,” Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 283, 1-114,
Van Duzee, M. C., Cole, Fr R., and Aldrich, John Merton. 1921. “The dipterous genus Dolichopus Latreille in North America.” Bulletin of the United States National Museum. i–vi, 1-304, 16 pls. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.03629236.116.i
Key to male nearctic Dolichopus species here – https://digitallibrary.amnh.org/items/5c3c75c8-27ae-47e6-acac-59ec0c30d1cb/full