yes they can if its moldy i think
They eat eggs.
They stay in the nest while the mother and father get food. After enough time has passed, the begin to practice flying.
Maggots are the larvae of regular flies which lay there eggs in old food/meat/faeces. These eggs hatch into maggots which eventually become flies. So it goes, eggs ---> maggots ---> flies
Fruit flies have laid eggs if you see small, white, oval-shaped eggs on the surface of fruits or in other food sources where the flies are present.
Flies lay eggs in spoiled meat because it is moist. Also once the eggs hatch it provides the maggots with plenty of food to eat.
Flies will often lay eggs on spoiled meat because they are attracted to the smell of the meat. The meat will provide a place for the eggs to incubate and also a source of food once the larvae hatch.
Flies get into the bin to lay eggs usually attracted to meat carcasses. They lay eggs which develop to maggots so they can feed on the food in your bin and turn into flies!
They pluck them while flying.
Mold attracts flies and they do breed in mold. Flies will lay eggs in he mold so that the maggots have a food source when the hatch.
The fly eggs hatch into larvae (also known as maggots) that feed on the protein and eventually pupate (cocoon) to become adult flies.
No, flying foxes do not lay eggs. They are mammals, specifically a type of bat, and give birth to live young. Female flying foxes typically have one pup at a time, which they nurse and care for until it is mature enough to fly and find food on its own.
Fruit flies lay eggs by depositing them on decaying fruits or vegetables. The female fruit fly uses her ovipositor to insert the eggs into the food source. The eggs hatch into larvae, which feed on the decaying matter. After a few days, the larvae pupate and eventually emerge as adult fruit flies. This process of reproduction allows fruit flies to quickly populate and infest areas with suitable food sources.