How many flies would it take to lift a human?

Dividing 110 pounds by the lift of a housefly, we find you'd need five million of the insects to lift you off the ground.
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How many flies in a pound?

There are 100,000 house flies in a pound of house flies.
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How much does a fly weigh?

4.2.

Generally, 1 adult fly weights around 100 µg.
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How much can butterflies lift?

Monarch butterflies weight about 0.5g, this means they can reasonably lift about 10g. Using spider silk as a line we can get down to ~40mg/mile which is basically negligible, so the butterfly can lift 10g of person.
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How fast are flies reflexes compared to humans?

It turns out this rate is different for every animal. The general rule is: the smaller the species, the quicker the vision. Humans see about 60 flashes per second while flies see about 250 — a full four times faster than humans.
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How Much Weight Can a Fly Actually Lift? Experiment—I Lassoed a Fly!



Why is it hard to swat a fly?

Why is it so hard to swat a fly? Scientists say they found that halteres — dumbbell-shaped evolutionary remnants of wings — are the reason why houseflies can takeoff quickly from any surface.
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Can flies feel pain?

Over 15 years ago, researchers found that insects, and fruit flies in particular, feel something akin to acute pain called “nociception.” When they encounter extreme heat, cold or physically harmful stimuli, they react, much in the same way humans react to pain.
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How strong is a fly?

Scientists have determined experimentally how much a housefly can lift. It's about 10 milligrams, or about 22 millionths of a pound. That may not sound like much, but it's an impressive 50 percent of a fly's body weight—you try picking up 55 pounds and flying off under your own steam.
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Will humans survive without butterflies?

If butterflies disappeared, the world would most certainly be worse off for children of all ages. But it's much worse than that. Many flowering plants are so closely linked to butterflies (and vice versa) that one cannot survive without the other.
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Do butterflies stop flying if you touch them?

If you touch a butterfly gently, it will lose some scales, but rarely enough to prevent it from flying. A butterfly wing is made of a thin membrane webbed with veins. Colorful scales cover the membrane, overlapping like roof shingles. These scales strengthen and stabilize the wings.
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Are humans too heavy to fly?

Humans are not physically designed to fly. We cannot create enough lift to overcome the force of gravity (or our weight). It's not only wings that allow birds to fly. Their light frame and hollow bones make it easier to counteract gravity.
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What is flies max speed?

The common housefly has a maximum flying speed of five miles per hour… even though its wings beat 20 thousand times per minute. The fly has four thousand separate lenses in each eye – eight thousand in all – providing wide angle vision which is in fact omnidirectional.
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Can flies get fat?

Here's the catch: Insects can build fat reserves but they never look overweight. Their outermost layer, the exoskeleton, is a hard, protective shell that doesn't grow like our skin does when we get bigger.
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Do flies have 3000 eyes?

A fly has two large eyes that cover most of their head. Each eye consists of at least 3,000 individual lenses called ommatidia. With all of these “simple eyes” flies can't focus on a single object like we do. Instead, they see the world as a kind of mosaic.
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Are flies edible?

Flies. Certain types of flies, which are rich in protein, are ground up and used in east African countries to enrich baked goods like crackers and muffins, as well as meat products like sausage and meatloaf. They also can be eaten roasted or sun-dried.
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What if a fly goes in your mouth?

According to Dr. Pritt, for the most part, eating a bug isn't cause for worry. In general, your body will digest arthropods, which include arachnids like spiders, mites, and ticks, and insects such as gnats, flies, mosquitoes, fleas, and bedbugs, “just like any other food,” she says.
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What will happen if flies go extinct?

If flies went extinct the planet would fill up with excrement and rotting flesh. If flies went extinct the world would fill up with rotting organic rubbish. It's because flies are composters. They act as scavengers alongside isopods eating and laying eggs on dead animals, excrement, dead wood, and anything rotting.
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What would happen if bees went extinct?

Without bees, the availability and diversity of fresh produce would decline substantially, and human nutrition would likely suffer. Crops that would not be cost-effective to hand- or robot-pollinate would likely be lost or persist only with the dedication of human hobbyists.
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Can flies be drunk?

It turns out that both flies and mammals can get drunk on alcohol. So, for their study, Scott Hansen, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Molecular Medicine, and his team, enabled fruit flies to become inebriated to track ethanol's path.
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Why is killing a fly so hard?

It's their superior vision. Flies have up to 6,000 ommatidia, or mini lenses, in each eye and can see us approach in “slow motion”. They may not have the highest resolution vision, but they've got some of the “fastest” vision on earth – giving them the time to quickly react and escape.
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What color is fly poop?

In pretty short order, the food is metabolized, and they poop out the rest in what we usually call "fly specks." Fly poop is tiny black or brown dots. You might also find amber-colored spots, but that's excess SFS left over from the meal.
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Do flies get hurt when you swat them?

Barely missing a fatal slap at a bothersome fly might be a headache for both of you, according to new research from scientists at the University of Sydney. They say they've found evidence that insects are capable of feeling chronic pain after an injury, much like we do.
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Can flies get angry?

The flies showed a primitive emotion-like behavior. Prompted by a series of brisk air puffs delivered in rapid succession, the flies ran around their test chambers in a frantic manner, and kept it up for several minutes. Even after the flies had calmed down, they remained hypersensitive to a single air puff.
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Do bugs feel pain when you squish them?

Researchers have looked at how insects respond to injury, and come to the conclusion that there is evidence to suggest that they feel something akin to what humans class as pain.
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