Yes flies are decomposers because a decomposer is something that breaksdown waste. Flies are examples of them
yes it is. BOOOM
Are black flies a omnivores
no
a fly
Since a maggot is a baby fly ... that would be one fly per one baby. They don't divide or anything.
In the case of the apple maggot flies, it is an example of sympatric speciation. Two different populations occur in different niches where there is no gene flow between the two.
a tsetse fly starts out as an egg and it stays with its mother. the blood that the mother steals helps the baby grow. then it will hatch and look a maggot. when she can carry it no longer, she releases it in the soil and the tsetse fly will grow up there.
Maggot Brain Theory was created on 1994-05-24.
for example a maggot is a decomposer and it eats human flesh
A maggot will become a fly through metamorphosis. The maggot is usually the larval stage in the life cycle of a fly.
A fly of maggot...
The parent of a maggot is called a fly. A maggot is only considered a maggot until it grows its legs and wings and is able to fly and provide for itself.
a fly.
Yes a fly does come from a maggot. If they didn't come from a maggot where else would they come from because i know for sure that i just don't see a random fly appear out of the sky.
No. They are baby flies, and therefore a maggot would be an insect larva.
A young fly is commonly referred to as a maggot. They get around by crawling since they have not developed their wings yet.
A maggot is in the class Insecta, which belongs to the phylum Arthropoda.
Maggot
One maggot will produce one fly! that fly will then produce hundreds of maggots, and so on....There will ALWAYS be flies!!
A fly is a decomposer because when a fly dies and it stays out to long it decomposes and turns to dust.