Yes, maggots are the larval stage of flies. Flies lay their eggs on decaying organic matter, including dead bodies. When the eggs hatch, they develop into maggots, which feed on the decomposing tissue.
no. but they appear when flies lay their eggs on foods. maggots turn into flys when they mature
Baby houseflies are called maggots. When flies are born they become larva and then they become maggots. The maggot will then eventually become a fly.
A single maggot can develop into one adult fly. Typically, a female fly lays hundreds of eggs, which hatch into maggots. Therefore, while one maggot becomes one fly, a single female can produce many maggots and, consequently, many flies over her lifetime.
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.
No , maggots are from flies
No flies lay maggots, flies lay eggs, these eggs will hatch into maggots.
durring the winter they are maggots!
Maggots are the larvae of flies, and they do not lay eggs themselves. Adult flies lay eggs, which then hatch into maggots.
If there are no flies then there will be no maggots. No flies, no eggs, no maggots.
Francesco Redi was an Italian physician and naturalist who proved maggots come from flies. He was the first scientist to challenge the theory of spontaneous generation.
Yes, maggots are the larval stage of flies. Flies lay their eggs on decaying organic matter, including dead bodies. When the eggs hatch, they develop into maggots, which feed on the decomposing tissue.
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.
Flies lay their eggs and they hatch as maggots
Like most insects, fruit flies and gnats develop from eggs. they lay their eggs the eggs which are called larvae. Larvae then hatches and maggots come out. Maggots then turn into puparium (cocoon like). Then these hatch into fruit flies. The hole ordeal take 48 hours.
Maggots are the young of flies and will grow up to be adult flies and those flies can reproduce.
Redi did an experiment seeing what maggots come from by putting meat into jars and left 1 open 1 covered with netting and one sealed the only one that didn't get maggots was the one that was sealed proving that maggots come from flies.