None. Flies do not reproduce asexually, so you need 2 flies per lay. Even with 2 flies it would depend on how good the male was in the sack and if the female smoked afterward.
A fly can lay 75-150 maggots at a time
Larvae of a fly are called maggots. When a house pet gets a wound it can be infested with maggots if not treated in time. Flies get attracted to such open wounds and lay eggs in it which eventually produce maggots.
yes all maggots are is a baby fly.
No flies lay maggots, flies lay eggs, these eggs will hatch into maggots.
Flies look for a food source upon which to lay their eggs and provide nourishment for the developing maggots. If there is no moist food available for the fly to deposit her eggs, then you will not get maggots in your house.
So the offspring (maggots) will have an available food source.
Maggots are the larvae of flies, and they do not lay eggs themselves. Adult flies lay eggs, which then hatch into maggots.
Yes they mate and then lay eggs in meat or rotting food which hatch maggots that turn into fly's
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.
Maggots do not spin a cocoon to become flies. Flies lay eggs which maggots hatch from and then go through a complete metamorphosis.
Garbage does not turn into maggots. A maggot is a larva of a fly, basically a just-hatched fly egg. Since flies are attracted by smelly, rotting things, that's where they tend to lay their eggs and where the larvae can feed.
Flies lay their eggs and when they hatch, it forms the maggot's, the fly larva , before they develop into flies.