The very thought of fly larvae squirming around in a corpse is difficult
for some people to stomach. It seems like they’re often regarded as one
of the most nauseating, abhorrent organisms in nature, largely due to
the whole “squirming around in corpses” thing, but the same reasons
people detest them are the same reasons they shouldn’t. A dead body is a
ticking time bomb of contagious diseases, and no other scavenger can
even come close to the importance of maggots. Everything about these
little critters – shape, size, squirminess, sliminess and even that
ghostly pale coloration – is adapted for maximum efficiency carcass
removal, scouring every nook and cranny of a skeleton for the tiniest
scraps of soft tissue. Thanks to maggots, most carcasses only lie around
in the wilderness for a few weeks before only bones remain, while other
processes of decomposition would have them festering for months. Maggot
activity is even somewhat antiseptic, destroying the bacteria they’re
basically competing with for food. The bottom line is…would you rather
every animal dropping dead every moment of every day nourish several
hundred flies or several million Anthrax bacteria?
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