“…The Brachycera comprise about 120 families. Species of the following families have been investigated with respect to their rhythms: Tephritidae (An et al., ; An, Tebo, Song, Frommer, & Raphael, ; Bertolini et al., ; Chahad‐Ehlers et al., ; Fuchikawa et al., ; Matsumoto et al., ; Mazzotta et al., ; Miyatake et al., ), Phoridae (Bostock, Green, Kyriacou, & Vanin, ), Calliphoridae (Muguruma, Goto, Numata, & Shiga, ; Saunders, ; Smith, ; Shiga & Numata, ; Warman, Newcomb, Lewis, & Evans, ; Yasuyama, Hase, & Shiga, ), Sarcophagidae (Goto & Denlinger, ; Koštál, Závodská, & Denlinger, ; Yamamoto, Nishimura, & Shiga, ; Yamamoto, Shiga, & Goto, ), Muscidae (Codd et al., ; Bazalova & Dolezel, ; Pyza & Meinertzhagen, ; Pyza, Siuta, & Tanimura, ), and Drosophilidae (see below) (Figure a). Among these, the genetic and neuronal basis of the circadian clock was revealed for the house fly M. domestica (Codd et al., ), the blow fly Protophormia terraenovae (Muguruma et al., ) and recently also for the olive fly, Bactrocera oleae (Bertolini et al., ).…”