Yes. Any animal could die from flies or maggots.
Maggots are the larvae of flies, and they do not lay eggs themselves. Adult flies lay eggs, which then hatch into maggots.
Maggots are actually immature flies and beetles. Think of the as less cool butterflies. Butterflies are first caterpillars as are flies to maggots. Flies live for about 48 hours. They lay their eggs in rotting flesh and die. The maggots hatch, reach maturity, and repeat the cycle as an adult fly.
If there are no flies then there will be no maggots. No flies, no eggs, no maggots.
No , maggots are from flies
Flies lay their eggs and they hatch as maggots
Maggots are the young of flies and will grow up to be adult flies and those flies can reproduce.
Maggots
Those white maggots are fly larva (fly babies) and they will turn into flies. Chances are, once they are grown, they will mate and die right there in the compost heap. And have more maggots. So if you like the idea of flies living in your garden, no it's not a bad thing. If not, well....
Flies lay their eggs in decaying organic matter, such as a dead animal, where they quickly hatch into larvae known as maggots. When a fly dies, the eggs it may have laid on its body are able to hatch and develop into maggots due to the warm, moist conditions present.
Baby flies are called maggots. Maggots are what hatch from fly eggs. Maggots then turn into pupae and finally emerge as house flies. There is really no such thing as baby flies, only flies that may appear smaller in size.
no there are essentially no maggots in ketchup however if you do happen to leave ketchup out and flies get to it, maggots are the spawn of flies and there will most likely be some in your old ketchup :)