No a housefly does not have a shell, it is an insect and has an exoskeleton.
No, male flies do not lay eggs. Only female flies have the ability to lay eggs.
Maggots are the larvae of flies, and they do not lay eggs themselves. Adult flies lay eggs, which then hatch into maggots.
Fruit flies typically lay their eggs on decaying fruit or other organic matter, rather than in human noses. They are not known to lay eggs in human nasal passages.
A fruit fly will not lay eggs in humans because they would not be able to stay still on a human long enough. A human would get the fly off of them before they would have a chance to lay eggs.
Flies lay their eggs in decaying organic matter, such as a dead animal, where they quickly hatch into larvae known as maggots. When a fly dies, the eggs it may have laid on its body are able to hatch and develop into maggots due to the warm, moist conditions present.
No, male flies do not lay eggs. Only female flies have the ability to lay eggs.
Horse flies do not lay eggs on humans, they lay eggs on leaves, grass and other vegetation. Flies that lay eggs under human skin are bot flies.
Fruit flies will lay eggs in rotting wood. Fruit flies will generally lay their eggs nearly anywhere that they can.
No, the male flies do not lay eggs. Female flies are larger than male flies. The female flies lay over 900,000 eggs during their lifespan.
Maggots are the larvae of flies, and they do not lay eggs themselves. Adult flies lay eggs, which then hatch into maggots.
Shortly after the mating season, most insects lay their eggs.
Mosquito lay eggs in water but housefly lay eggs on land.
no
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.
a fruit fly can lay 17000 eggs in 10 days
when it stands on something
Yes, if flies lay eggs in exposed rotting meat their larva will feed themselves until developed and then turn into new flies. If the rotting meat is not exposed the flies will not be able to lay eggs and there will be no emerging flies.