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maggots?

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Leapers | 21:38 Sun 07th Sep 2008 | Animals & Nature
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me again sorry
before maggots turn to flies are they still counted as insects or are they called larvae? i wasnt sure but guessed they may be larvae rather than insects as they lack the characteristics of an insect, but for some reason i cant get out the thought of them being a mammal but i know this is wrong.
thanks
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Maggots are larvae of flies leapers. To be an insect, it'd have to have certain characteristics, including 6 legs.
Mammals suckle their young and are warm-blooded. x
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thanks Ice.Maiden
i thought that too but having it confirmed has set my mind at rest
When fly maggots have eaten enough they turn into a pupae, little brown pellets, that are likened to a butterfly's chrysalis but instead of hanging somewhere they rest in nooks and crannies. Then they go through a complete metamorphism and emerge as flies.
They are insects, just an immature stage.
when they are in the chrysalis state they are called "casters"
this is not the scientific name for them but thats what fishermen call them.

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