The spontaneous activity and locomotor responses to liver odour of females of the blowfly Lucilia sericata Meigen (Diptera: Calliphoridae) were examined in the laboratory using a rocking-box olfactometer. Spontaneous activity levels depended on fly age, previous exposure to protein and recent oviposition history; 1-day-old females, 3-day-old protein-fed females, and females that had recently oviposited exhibited lower levels of spontaneous activity than protein-deprived or fully gravid individuals. Changes in locomotor activity in response to liver odour also depended on previous exposure to protein. In protein-fed flies, activity decreased in response to liver odour and then increased on termination of an odour pulse. This response became more pronounced with age, broadly in line with the expected state of oocyte maturation. This pattern of change was not evident in protein-deprived females. The results are discussed in relation to the relative importance of protein and oviposition-site resources to Lsericata and the resultant age and ovarian development-stage biases evident in field catches.