This one’s interesting!
I probably won’t ever be able to identify the species itself, but I believe this is Hover fly maggot! (specifically Syrphinae).
I love finding fly larvae, there’s so much variety that it’s unbelievable!
04/05/22

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Norway
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Poland
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
This one’s interesting!
I probably won’t ever be able to identify the species itself, but I believe this is Hover fly maggot! (specifically Syrphinae).
I love finding fly larvae, there’s so much variety that it’s unbelievable!
04/05/22
I rarely come across fly larvae, so this was a pleasant surprise!
I found the specimen digging into some mulch at a zoo. No clue where it came from.
Sadly don’t have a clue about ID, suggestions welcome ❤
25/05/22
why does this cape ivy gall fly larva look like a seal
fr though this is the cutest thing in the world
y’all…
🥺
this is the cutest thing i’ve ever seen
I was processing apples and I found a child of god (fly larva) where it didn’t belong (my apples)
It was plump and wriggling so I put it outside in the strawberry bush. Be free little one, burrow deep for winter is coming.
I hate killing bugs, even pest bugs like flies and ants or bugs that scare me like spiders (i said bugs not insects). It just doesn’t feel right to kill something just because it’s small and irritating and you can. Why should something have to die just because it had the misfortune to be seen?
My green onions were suddenly doing very poorly, and I couldn't figure out why. Too much sun? Not enough water? Nope. Maggots.
The larvae of the onion fly eat the bulbs of onions and garlic. They decimated the roots, and hid themselves inside the bulb! Bastards!
In Lithuania and Australia, hungry fly larvae are used to process food waste into useful protein
Live Maggots, Spikes, Blue Bottle Fly Larvae for Fishing Bait, for Feeding Dart Frogs, Reptiles, Chickens, Birds and Fish.
Live Maggots, Spikes, Blue Bottle Fly Larvae for Fishing Bait, for Feeding Dart Frogs, Reptiles, Chickens, Birds and Fish.
We have been working hard trying to figure out how to breed the biggest fly maggots, get them to be hardy so that they a tough enough to ship and put on a hook for fishing bait and able to last so that you can feed them to reptiles, chickens, dart frogs or whatever you might feed our maggots to. Our chicks and dart frogs love our fat white maggots, but enough about me.
Spikes are the larva of…
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