Their mouth because of suliva left in it.
A maggot is an insect.
No, if you mean, catching a case of magots from a dog. From the grown flies from the maggots, that's problematical. Really good biologists are still argueing about that one. It's helpful to be dead, unless you got really bad skin care with the dog. Or sheep, or goat; then, it might not be living tissue but just dead surface tissue. Watch out for secondary infection. Not maggots. Side point: If you got screw-worms in a living dog or any other animal, you really need to get in touch with the Department of Agriculture, in the United States of either America or Mexico at once. Maggots in living tissue are a serious public health problem, not to mention, the entire livestock industry. The Screw worm has cost billions of dollars, ended cultures, and wiped out lives.
Dead organisms (unless specially preserved) will decay, and the soft tissue will rot and eventually disappear, leaving behind only bones or shells (for those organisms that have bones or shells).
In space, without oxygen or bacteria, decomposition would not occur. A dead body in a suit would be well preserved due to the extreme cold temperatures and lack of oxygen, essentially mummifying it. Without a suit, the body would be exposed to radiation and extreme temperatures, causing it to freeze-dry and mummify as well.
If you find a dead body and not sure about the religion that either that person is Muslim or Non Muslim, Give a bath to the dead body and offer that water to a horse with which you gave bath to the body. If the horse accept it, it would be a muslim other wise non muslim.
Maggots are produced by flies, not by dead bodies. Whether maggots would appear will depend on whether flies land on the body. If the room is merely concealed (i.e. hidden) there's nothing to stop flies getting in. If you mean a sealed, airtight room then maggots would not appear.
If there are no flies then there will be no maggots. No flies, no eggs, no maggots.
The first bugs on a dead body are flies and beetles. Maggots and beetle larvae are also found on a dead body.
Lots of different little bugs like maggots
Leeches are blood sucking parasites, they are normally found in body's of fresh water. Maggots are fly larvae they can be found in rotting food or carcases ( like a dead body, maggots can be found where flys have laid eggs), an example is maggots can found in cans of raw mushrooms.
Unless you ate one (in which case it would be dead) there isn't a maggot in you body. Maggots only eat dead tissue and this is why they can be soo usefull for thinks like gangreen where the eat the dead, rotten tissue but are not interested in the healthy stuff.
no maggots will only eat dead tissue.
Only if they are dead. Then their main goal would be to place eggs in the body of the guinea pig. The eggs turn into maggots, that then eat the guinea pig.
yes, they eat anything that's dead or rotton, i have a project on them. =)
because maggots live in dead bodies or any where disgusting
Yes. However you would have to already be dead at that point, so don't worry about it.
Maggots can feed on a body inside a casket if they have gained access to it through natural decomposition processes or by other means of entry. They are often one of the first organisms to decompose soft tissues in a dead body.