<h2 id="chapter-12"><ANTIMG src="images/i_133.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER XII<br/> <span class="chapter-title">FLY SCAVENGERS</span></h2>
<p><span class="upper">There</span> are various kinds of insects that perform
a very useful work in the world, for
which they do not always receive credit. When you
pass a dead Mole in the fields, and see Ants,
Beetles and Flies on it, you shudder and get away
from the spot as quickly as possible. You think they
are horrid, dirty insects; but they are not; they are
busy making the world a cleaner place for you to live
in. Let us watch some of these Flies at work, and
we shall get an idea of the wonderful things they do
in this connection.</p>
<p>You have seen the Greenbottle Flies. They are a
beautiful golden-green which shines like metal, and
they have red eyes, set in a silver border. They
scent dead animals from far away, and rush to lay
their eggs in them. A few days afterward, the
flesh of the corpse has turned into liquid, in which
are thousands of tiny grubs with pointed heads. This
is very unpleasant, perhaps you think; but, after all,
it is the best and easiest way for dead things to disappear,
to be absorbed in the soil and pass on to
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another form of life. And it is the little Greenbottle
worms that produce this liquid.</p>
<p>If the corpse were left undisturbed, it would dry
up and take a long while to disappear. The Greenbottle
grubs, and the grubs of other Flies as well,
have a wonderful power of turning solid things into
liquid. When I give the Greenbottle grubs a piece
of hard-boiled white of egg to feed upon, they turn
it at once into a colorless liquid which looks like
water. They have some sort of pepsin which comes
out of their mouths and does this work. It is like the
gastric juice in our stomach, which dissolves and renders
digestible the food we eat. The grubs or worms
live on the broth they make in this way until it has
all disappeared.</p>
<p>Other Flies whose worms do this work are the
Gray Flesh-flies and the big Bluebottles, whom you
often see buzzing about the window-panes. Do not
let them come near the meat for your dinner, for if
they do they will surely make it uneatable. Out in
the fields, however, they are in their right element.
They give back to life, with all speed, the remains
of that which has lived; they change corpses into an
essence which enriches our foster-mother earth.</p>
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