No, fruit fly eggs are too small to be seen with the naked eye. They are typically about 0.5 millimeters in size.
On the overripe fruit walls
A fruit fly can lay up to 100-200 eggs in one batch.
a fruit fly can lay 17000 eggs in 10 days
The gene for fruit fly eye color is located on the X chromosome. It codes for a protein called "eye color," which determines the pigmentation in the eyes of the fruit fly. Mutations in this gene can lead to different eye colors in fruit flies.
Fruit flies lay eggs on fruits because ripe or overripe fruits provide an excellent food source for their larvae to feed and develop. The fruit also offers a suitable environment with the necessary moisture and nutrients for the eggs to hatch and grow into adult flies.
To prevent fruit fly eggs from hatching in water, you can cover the water container with a fine mesh or cloth to prevent the flies from laying eggs in the water. Additionally, regularly changing the water and keeping the area clean can help prevent fruit fly infestations.
A fruit fly can live up to 40-50 days. A female fruit fly will lay her eggs on a piece of fruit or decaying organism. The eggs will hatch into larvae, eat from the fruit and grow into a full grown adult fruit fly.
A female fruit fly can lay up to 500 eggs in her lifetime, typically depositing them in batches of 75-100 at a time. This high reproductive rate is one reason why fruit flies are considered a common model organism in genetics research.
No. Flies do not have live births, they lay eggs.
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.
All the offspring had red eyes. The white eye trait is recessive, so it did not appear in the offspring.
If depends on the type of insect of course. If it's the eggs of a fruit fly then nothing. If it's the eggs of a blow fly then you are in for a gruesome death.