yes all maggots are is a baby fly.
Flies lay their eggs and they hatch as maggots
Flies start out as eggs that hatch into maggots. Maggots hatch as larvae, larvae hatch as pupae, and pupae turn in to house flies.
Err no. Maggots are the beginning stage of flies. Flies lay the eggs, which then hatch into larve that later become Maggots.
No flies lay maggots, flies lay eggs, these eggs will hatch into maggots.
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
It doesn't, flies plant eggs in them and the eggs hatch into maggots which eat the rotten milk. Appetizing, isn't it?
Maggot is a general term for the larval form of an insect. They appear 2-5 days after an adult insect lays its eggs. In the case of a deceased animal, flies are usually the source of maggots. The flies lay their eggs after being drawn to the smell of rotting flesh. The eggs hatch into maggots and they get their nutrients from eating the body. This also aids in decomposition. Actually there is a field of forensics called forensic entymology or solving crimes by observing the insects/larva on a body. Each insect has a specific life cycle and the time it takes for the larva to hatch can be diagnostic.
There could be maggots in your sugar if a fly ever landed on the sugar while it was opened. Flies leave eggs and the maggots will hatch anywhere.
Flies are drawn to the rotting material and get inside of it and lay their eggs. When the eggs hatch, there are the maggots. They then feed on the rotting meat.
Flies lay their eggs and when they hatch, it forms the maggot's, the fly larva , before they develop into flies.
Flies lay their eggs and when they hatch, it forms the maggot's, the fly larva , before they develop into flies.
Pasteur