Yes, maggots can exhibit turn alteration, which refers to their ability to change direction in response to environmental stimuli. This behavior is often observed in response to gradients of light, temperature, or chemical signals, allowing them to navigate towards suitable environments for feeding and development. Their movement is typically characterized by a series of bends and turns as they explore their surroundings.
Quartz does not show alteration. Micas in themselves are alteration minerals. They form out of an alteration process... (Trust the geologist, not the amateur) This is wrong: well i think that it is mica that is the only one that shows no alteration
Yes.
no
No, you probably had some sort of grain pest in the rice and you are seeing the larval stage.
Maggots do not spin a cocoon to become flies. Flies lay eggs which maggots hatch from and then go through a complete metamorphosis.
Yes. Maggots are fly larvae.
It doesn't, flies plant eggs in them and the eggs hatch into maggots which eat the rotten milk. Appetizing, isn't it?
no. but they appear when flies lay their eggs on foods. maggots turn into flys when they mature
Uh...no. The only things that turns into maggots are fly eggs.
No eventually they pupate and turn into adult houseflies.
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 get into the bin to lay eggs usually attracted to meat carcasses. They lay eggs which develop to maggots so they can feed on the food in your bin and turn into flies!