Suction caps on their feet. To me the real magic is how they land upside down. I found the answer though some research. "On approaching the ceiling, and while still flying right side up, flies extend their forelegs over their heads till they can grab a landing spot with the suction caps in their feet. Their momentum then enables them to swing their hind legs up, like a gymnast on a trapeze."
However, MSNBC reported (related link below) that:
Scientists once thought that the curved shape of the hairs suggested that flies used them to grip onto the ceiling. In fact, the hairs produce a glue-like substance made of sugars and oils. A research team from the German Max Planck Institute for Metals Research recently studied more than 300 species of wall-climbing insects and watched them all leave behind sticky footprints. Team leader Stanislav Gorb presented the findings at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Experimental Biology in April.
It was found that aforementioned meeting was at University of Kent at Canterbury Monday 3rd - Friday 7th April 2006.
the fly has suction cups on their feet which stick to any surface
Fly feet are covered in tiny but strong hairs that slightly dig in to any thing they land on.
They stay on the ceiling with a special kind of glue that is removable.
It has the equivalent of suckers on its legs.
Mosquitoes (and all other insects) have microscopic hairs on their feet that act like Velcro and hold them onto surfaces, even upside down. Scientists are working on recreating it.
they have a like a little sticky pad on their feet
They have special little sponge-like things on the end of there legs, so that sticks to surfaces.
one foot in front of the others...
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yes or other wise they wouldent walk on ceilings and more
gecko
flys
Because there trying to eat your food. becausethe food is warm
Geckos have billions of invisible hairs on the bottoms of their feet. These hairs are called spatulae and they work sort of like Velcro. This allows them to walk up walls and across ceilings. The more humid the air, the stickier the hairs get.
birds walk on them but the flys dont dont like it get a different answer
i think your talking about flees not flys flees. and the can't hurt you but they can get in your hair and skin and make you very itchy
flys medium flys flys medium flys
flys and other bugs flys and other bugs flys and other bugs flys and other bugs
yes flys are invertabrates
How Time Flys was created in 1973.