A female adult bot fly can lay from 300 to 1000 eggs in her short life span. The adult bot fly has no other goal in life than to lay eggs.
Yes, if the Bot fly has been infected with a infectious disesease including AIDS.
Yes, if they get to your brain via your ears.
You don't. They grow from eggs laid by female bot flies under the skin of an animal. When the eggs hatch maggots grow under the skin and then metamorphose into adult bot flies, which then cut their way out to emerge through the skin.
Bot fly is any of various stout, two-winged flies, chiefly of the genera Gasterophilus and Oestrus, having larve that are parasitic on various animals, especially horses and sheep, and sometimes on humans.
When you feel like you can fly like a bot.
the bot fly dose not lay its eggs directly, instead it btes a smaller host insect and lays it in there, if the small incet bites a human the eggs are impregnated into it, there has only ever been one report of this when a BBC reporter was bitten behind the ear and kept awake at night by the sound of the bot flys eating away at the flesh inside his head
I've never heard of black ones. But the yellow ones are bot eggs, a bot fly will lay an egg that attaches to the horse's hair, the lava will then hatch and burrow into the horse. Certain wormers will kill the parasite upon entry.
Probably Bot Fly eggs. You need to pick them off or use a small shedder to get them off.
No. That is not a possibility. The Human Bot Fly lays its eggs on a horsefly or a mosquito, something that will attempt to land on a human. This carrier finds a human and lands on him or her. The eggs rub off onto the human, whose body heat hatches the eggs. The larvae drop onto the skin and burrow right in. Where they live. Under your skin. Eating.
A Bot fly