They are called scavengers or detritivores.
No. However, flies may lay their eggs in the flesh of a dead horse, and these become maggots which feed on the rotting flesh until they hatch into flies.
Flies are attracted to dead flesh. They locate it by smell.
Only once they are dead, then the flies lay their eggs on the little boys' dead bodies. The maggots which hatch from the eggs are the things that actually eat the dead flesh.
larvaemaggotscarrion beetlesvulturecarrion
Yes, flies can come from dead animals. When an animal dies, flies are attracted to the decaying flesh and lay their eggs on it. The eggs hatch into larvae (maggots) that feed on the decaying tissue, eventually developing into adult flies.
yes they do. Flies Lay eggs in dead things like mice,rats birds, anything that was alive once. the eggs hatch and eat the dead flesh as they get bigger you can see them. over time they become ( yes you guessed it) flies.
A fly of maggot...
What eats human corpses are not worms, but maggots. Maggots are the offspring of flies. Dead things tend to attract flies (the stench of rotting flesh may be disgusting to us, but lovely to flies), and those flies come and eat the flesh as well as lay eggs on the decaying body. Once the eggs hatch, you get maggots, which also consume the flesh/bodily fluids of the body.
Re-Animated Dead Flesh was created in 2004-10.
Rotting flesh of dead animals is a breeding ground for flies and other insects that can spread disease. Scavenger animals are also attracted to the remains. Not a nice thing to have in your backyard.
flesh n bone is dead!
Yes, some species of flies, such as the screwworm fly (Cochliomyia hominivorax), lay their eggs on open wounds or sores, where the larvae feed on flesh and bacteria. These flies can cause serious infections and tissue damage in animals, including humans. Proper wound care and hygiene can help prevent infestations.