What if flies didn't exist?

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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Do we need flies to exist?

The biggest benefit from flies comes from the parasitic species. They attack caterpillars, grasshoppers, and other insects that eat our food plants. Some flies also help pollinate plants that we grow. Flies are also important food source for other animals that we value, like fish.
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Will flies ever go extinct?

For millions of years they have existed and survived through generations. But will flies ever go extinct despite their evolutionary advantages? The short answer is no and it's very likely they'll outlive humans.
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Will humans ever 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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Can Earth survive without flies?

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 If Flies Went Extinct?



Why did God create flies?

Augustine's idea that God created flies to punish human arrogance, and not just the calamitous technological arrogance of DDT. Flies are, as one bi- ologist has remarked, the resurrection and the reincarnation of our own dirt, and this is surely one reason we smite them down with such ferocity.
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Do flies feel lonely?

The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster is a social animal. Flies kept in chronic social isolation have now been found to show dysregulated sleep and feeding patterns, casting light on how prolonged absence of social contact affects health.
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Do flies suffer on fly paper?

None of us like living with insects or rodents, but this is cruel. Insects or animals caught in these traps struggle against the glue trying to escape. Eventually, they succumb to injuries, exhaustion, starvation or dehydration over the several hours or days it takes to die.
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Do flies feel pain when you hit them?

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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Do flies feel pain when you squish them?

As far as entomologists are concerned, insects do not have pain receptors the way vertebrates do. They don't feel 'pain,' but may feel irritation and probably can sense if they are damaged. Even so, they certainly cannot suffer because they don't have emotions.
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Do flies get hurt when you hit 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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Why do flies annoy you?

Houseflies contaminate food, skin and surfaces, while annoying you by buzzing and periodically landing on your body. Let's face it. Houseflies are simply disgusting. They're your second-cousin-twice-removed who picks his nose at the family reunion, and then wants to play cards.
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Do flies make love?

"Sexual interaction is pleasurable and rewarding for male flies in a similar way as mammals," she said. These neurological reward systems are primitive, thought to have emerged long ago in the shared evolutionary history between human and fly. Fruit flies even engage in foreplay.
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Do flies land on you on purpose?

After all, we're a lot larger, more intimidating and come brandishing swatters. The fact of the matter is that houseflies are scavengers and land on us because, well, they like us: The human body, like some of their favorite food sources -- feces, food and rotting flesh -- radiates a sense of warmth and nourishment.
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Who created the God?

We ask, "If all things have a creator, then who created God?" Actually, only created things have a creator, so it's improper to lump God with his creation. God has revealed himself to us in the Bible as having always existed. Atheists counter that there is no reason to assume the universe was created.
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Why do flies want blood?

Female mosquitoes, horseflies, and deer flies are bloodsuckers that need proteins and fats in the host's blood so they can develop their eggs. When it's time to reproduce, these bloodsuckers eat a blood meal.
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Why did a fly have blood in it?

Insects don't have blood exactly like ours, but theirs does some of the same jobs, transporting things throughout their bodies. Their blood moves nutrients, waste products, and hormones.
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Can flies get depressed?

Flies have a little brain, which is perfect for research since it is simple enough, but yet contains many of the same basic functions found in humans. Moreover, flies are an already established model to study stress induced depression.
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What animals mate for pleasure?

Bonobos and other primates will have sex while pregnant or lactating – seemingly just for the joy of it – while short-nosed fruit bats engage in oral sex to prolong their bouts of intercourse (there might be evolutionary reasons for this, but it could also be for fun).
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How long is the lifespan of a fly?

What is the Lifespan of a Fly? Houseflies pass through four distinct stages: egg, larva, pupa and adult. The life expectancy of a housefly is generally 15 to 30 days and depends upon temperature and living conditions.
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Are flies clean or dirty?

Flies are dirty. Not in a moral or political way. But in a bacteria- and other pathogen-carrying way.
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Why is it so 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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Why do flies avoid being hit?

Slow motion vision thwarts swatters

The secret to this impressive evasiveness isn't some kind of mind-reading trick of the fly. 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”.
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Do flies get mad?

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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Can flies see fly swatters?

Mr. DICKINSON: And flies have a visual system that is well-designed to do this, they have the fastest visual system known of any organism. Their eyes don't see, by the way, a hundred fly swatters coming at them.
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