The footballer © Katrina Martin/2020VISION
The footballer
This common hoverfly is often seen visiting flowers. It's named for its stripy thorax, which looks a bit like a football shirt.
Enw gwyddonol
Helophilus pendulusPryd i'w gweld
April to NovemberGwybodaeth am rywogaethau
Categori
Ystadegau
Wing length: 8.5-11.25 mmStatws cadwraethol
Common and widespread
Cynefinoedd
Ynghylch
The footballer takes its name from the black and yellow stripes on its thorax, a pattern that is often used on football shirts. It's sometimes also called the common tiger hoverfly or the sun fly.It is common across the UK in a wide variety of habitats, from woodlands to gardens and roadsides. It can often be seen visiting flowers on sunny days. The footballer is particularly fond of damp areas, as its young (larvae) live in shallow water with lots of rotting vegetation, or in very wet manure. They are known as rat-tailed maggots because of their long 'tail', which is actually a breathing tube.
Sut i'w hadnabod
There are several similar stripy-bodied hoverflies related to the footballer, which can be tricky to tell apart. The footballer is the most common of them, so is probably the one you're most likely to see.Key features include a yellow face with a black stripe down the centre and the amount of orange on its hind tibia (the middle section of its back leg). On the footballer, the top two thirds of the hind tibia are orange, with the bottom third black. Other similar species have more black.