SntaCruz83
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- Jun 4, 2011
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Today I was sitting in the backyard and I was being pestered by a rather large fly. It didn't look like a bottle fly, but perhaps a flesh fly. After landing on my mojito I was out for revenge and went to get my net. I caught the ******* and dumped him in with one of my chinese mantises and let nature run its course (according to my will) while I went to get another drink. It wasn't long before the fly was being eaten up and I was quite pleased with myself. When I returned to the enclosure to empty out any legs/wings that were tossed aside I noticed that one of the legs was moving around. I know that the antennae from a detached insect head can still move, but a fly's leg? Upon closer inspection I could see probably around 50 tiny maggots crawling around and in turn moving the leg slightly. I clean the enclosures just about every day, so I'm almost certain that those weren't in there before the fly was dropped in there. But, I thought flies laid eggs! I did a quick search on the net and saw that some people believe that a case like this could be from a parasite the fly might have had. Others say that there may be flies that lay live maggots. As far as I know, only some bot flies lay live maggots and I don't think we have those in our area (Southern California - Orange County).
I'm looking to see if anyone has any input on this, and if it WAS a parasite, is there a chance that I've now infected my mantis? Or does a parasite maggot not work like a tapeworm does? Thanks.
I'm looking to see if anyone has any input on this, and if it WAS a parasite, is there a chance that I've now infected my mantis? Or does a parasite maggot not work like a tapeworm does? Thanks.