You have to cover the hole with a thick layer of Vaseline, and wait for the bot-fly to come out for air. Then slowly pull it out with a pair of tweezers.
Another way is to place a piece of raw meat on top of the hole. The bot-fly will hopefully crawl into the meat.
If you don't have many resources, lighting a cigarette, placing it insides a bottle and putting it over the hole will hopefully draw it out.
You must put some type of air tight bandage OVER the spot where the larvae is until it suffocates (give 24 hours to be sure). Take a piece of Duct Tape and put it over the spot (with vaseline under the spot). After this period is over extract the bot larvae with a pair of tweezers.
Yes.
Yes, bot flies are classified in the order Diptera. Diptera is the same order of insects which contains the flies.
Bot flies are not common in the Middle East or Asia. However it is possible for them to be in the country since it is close to water.
yes
No
Yes, bot flies are classified in the order Diptera. Diptera is the same order of insects which contains the flies.
Absolutely!
they are actually really dangerous
From what I have read, they are in every state in the US. There are 26 species of Bot Flies in North America. They perfer Rodents, but they will infest any mammal they find.
You don't. They grow from eggs laid by female bot flies under the skin of an animal. When the eggs hatch maggots grow under the skin and then metamorphose into adult bot flies, which then cut their way out to emerge through the skin.
no
Having just returned from NH and finding a mouse that had 3 bot flies in it, I would imagine those same flies to be able to live in humans. Mouse bots are a cute fly called Cuterebrids, they cannot live in humans. The human bot is exclusively tropical.