City life may help Darwin’s finches survive bloodsucking flies
![](https://images.newscientist.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/22165458/SEI_149289164.jpg?width=300)
A small-billed ground finch on Española Island
Krystyna Szulecka/Alamy
Finches found only in the Galapagos Islands are under attack from bloodsucking fly larvae, but those that live in cities may have an edge compared with their countryside counterparts: they lose less blood and have higher rates of survival during infestations.
The avian vampire fly (Philornis downsi) was accidentally introduced to the Galapagos archipelago a few decades ago. The flies lay eggs in bird nests, where maggots that hatch later burrow into nestlings’ skin and drink their blood. Infestations of the invasive parasites …