Since a maggot is a baby fly ... that would be one fly per one baby. They don't divide or anything.
A maggot grows up to become a fly. Maggots are the larval stage of flies, which eventually pupate and emerge as adults.
Yes flies are decomposers because a decomposer is something that breaksdown waste. Flies are examples of them
In the case of the apple maggot flies, it is an example of sympatric speciation. Two different populations occur in different niches where there is no gene flow between the two.
Maggot Brain Theory was created on 1994-05-24.
Since a maggot is a baby fly ... that would be one fly per one baby. They don't divide or anything.
One maggot will produce one fly! that fly will then produce hundreds of maggots, and so on....There will ALWAYS be flies!!
Baby flies are called maggot.
they belong to giants
A maggot is fly larva, and flies are insects.
Yes a fly does come from a maggot. If they didn't come from a maggot where else would they come from because i know for sure that i just don't see a random fly appear out of the sky.
Apple maggot flies originally were living only on hawthornes. When apples were introduced, some flies started reproducing on apples and so the apple maggot fly evolved.
grasshopper
A female maggot is typically referred to as a "maggot" without any gender-specific term. Maggots are the larval stage of flies, and they do not have distinct male or female characteristics until they develop into adult flies. Therefore, the term "female maggot" is not commonly used in entomology or biology.
Apple maggot flies evolved when the ancestor began laying eggs on hawthornes. After apples were introduced to America, the flies started laying eggs on both apples and hawthornes.
A Maggot has 460 pages.
Maggot cocoons protect the maggot once the cocoon is fully sealed, this is called the pupa stage. They come out of the cocoon an adult and usually fly away.