Maggots do not spin a cocoon to become flies. Flies lay eggs which maggots hatch from and then go through a complete metamorphosis.
No, fruit fly maggots are always fruit flies. The don't become adults until they emerge from their pupa.
Maggots, in fact, actually turn in flies. Maggots are the pupal form of the common and other types of flies. They are adept at eating decaying material.
No, maggots usually turn into flies.
If you eat a maggot that is in a fruit, it will get digested in your body. You should not get sick, but if you do, visit your doctor to be checked out.
It's a fruit because it grows flowers before it becomes a fruit.
A fruit on a plant is the ovary.
Basically green plants are producers and a maggot is not a green plant so it must be a consumer
In the ovary, there are ovules. There, when it is fertilized, it becomes a fruit.
The Ovary of the flower becomes the fruit after fertilization by pollen
The ovary is the ovary before it is fertilizes (containing the ovules); after fertilization the ovary becomes the fruit and the ovules become the seeds
Lawson Caesar has written: 'The codling moth' -- subject(s): Codling moth, Fruit, Insect pests, Diseases and pests 'Little peach disease' -- subject(s): Diseases and pests, Fruit, Peach 'The apple maggot' -- subject(s): Apples, Apple maggot, Diseases and pests 'Cherry fruit-flies' -- subject(s): Cherry, Cherry fruit-fly, Diseases and pests 'Lime-sulphur wash' -- subject(s): Control, Fruit, Spraying and dusting in agriculture, Insect pests, Diseases and pests
In the ovary, there are ovules. There, when it is fertilized, it becomes a fruit.
The ovule is the plant's reproductive organ. When the ovule becomes fertilized, it develops into a seed. The ovary becomes the fruit walls.
The ovary (which becomes the fruit) contains an ovule (or several to many ovules) which becomes the seed which contains the embryo.
The ovary (which becomes the fruit) contains an ovule (or several to many ovules) which becomes the seed which contains the embryo.