As well as sex-crazed spiders, we could be about to get an invasion from billions of daddy longlegs.

The insects are set to hatch out this autumn in a "boom of food" for wildlife - including a giant variety spreading north because of climate change.

Also knows as crane flies, daddy longlegs provide food for wildlife such as birds and spiders just before the winter comes, insect charity Buglife said.

Some 200 billion of the harmless insects, which commonly head into homes, are expected to hatch out this year because of a warm summer and recent rain.

Most of the crane flies hatching out are Tipula paludosa, a species which is around an inch in size and is found across the UK.

But a non-native species, Tipula maxima, which has a leg span of up to four inches, is also spreading north because of warming temperatures.

Buglife's Rory Dimond said: "They are gradually spreading northwards. They are a non-native species, and they come in from the trading points down the south, in areas like Dover and Kent.

"When the summer is warmer they have more chance of wandering between houses and colonising that way."

Crane fly larvae, known as leatherjackets, live in the ground where they eat roots.

They often prove to be a pest for gardeners as they damage lawns, particularly in spring, and can lead to other wildlife such as birds, badgers and foxes digging into the turf in search of a meal.

There are many species of crane fly in the UK, including some very rare ones, such as the royal splinter crane fly, so named because it only occurs in Windsor Great Park.