About Me:
The housefly (also house fly, house-fly or common housefly), Musca domestica, is a fly of the suborder Cyclorrhapha. It is the most common of all domestic flies, accounting for about 91% of all flies in human habitations, and indeed one of the most widely distributed insects, found all over the world. It is considered a pest that can carry serious diseases.
Each female fly can lay approximately 500 eggs in several batches of about 75 to 150. Within a day, larvae (maggots) hatch from the eggs; they live and feed on organic material, such as garbage. The adult flies emerge from the pupae stage anywhere from 2 to 27 days depending on the temperature conditions. (This whole cycle is known as complete metamorphosis.) The adults live from two weeks to a month in the wild. Having emerged from the pupae, the flies cease to grow; small flies are not necessarily young flies, but are instead the result of getting insufficient food during the larval stage.
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