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Eat Like a Housefly- Eat Barf!

In this activity, use jello and vinegar to introduce students to how Houseflies feed.

A human's way of eating is rather boring, compared to the technique used by flies! Without barfing frequently, a housefly would not survive!

Houseflies don’t have mouths that bite, chew or jab. When a fly lands on something, it "tastes", or senses chemistry, with its feet. Then, if the fly finds something tasty, it will barf (regurgitate) on it. Fly vomit contains digestive enzymes, which break down the food so that the fly can stick out its proboscis and use its sponge-like tongue (labellum) to mop up the barf soup.

Other animals also eat "vomit":

  • Birds : Doves, finches, penguins, herons and others all regurgitate partially processed food into the mouths of their hungry babies. The food that baby birds receive doesn't actually come from the parent's stomach at all. When the parent bird swallows, their food goes down the throat and into a grinding and storage sack, called the crop. At the nest, the ground food comes out of storage and becomes the babies' meal.
  • Canines: Wild Wolves and Coyotes will regurgitate partially digested meat for their young pups to eat when returning to the safety of a den after a hunt.

Next time you complain about what’s put in front of you at dinnertime, just be glad you’re not eating barf!

Human vomit is different, it contains:

  • Anything not digested from the last meal
  • ​Acids that kill bacteria
  • Digestive Enzymes that break down food
  • Mucus that protects the stomach itself from those acids and enzymes

Vomiting is useful to humans because it gets rid of stuff that your body thinks could be dangerous to you. In fact, throwing up is so potentially helpful that there is a part of the brain called the vomit centre that induces vomiting.

Different things can excite the vomit centre to bring on barfing in humans:

  • Something bothering the lining of the stomach.
  • Confusing information from body position sensors.
  • Hormones.
  • Unpleasant sights or smells.

Vocabulary:

  • Proboscis: an elongated sucking insect mouthpart that is typically tubular and flexible.
  • Regurgitate: The expulsion of material from the mouth, pharynx, or esophagus, usually characterized by the presence of undigested food or blood.
  • Digestive Enzyme: a substance produced by a living organism in which acts as a catalyst to bring about a specific biochemical reaction (food breakdown).
  • Vomit (verb): The forceful expulsion of the contents of one’s stomach through the mouth.
  • Vomit (noun): the contents of one’s stomach after it has been expelled out the mouth.
  • Pharynx: the part of the throat behind the mouth and nasal cavity.
  • Esophagus: part of the alimentary canal that connects the throat to the stomach
  • Alimentary Canal: the whole passage along which food passes through the body from mouth to anus

Objectives

  • Describe why vomiting is beneficial to both humans and other animals.

Materials

  • Per Demo or Group:
    prepared Jello, cut into small pieces in a shallow plate
    vinegar
    turkey baster
    1 fake fly head or fly head diagram

Key Questions

  • Why do flies vomit before eating when humans might vomit after eating?
  • What other animals rely on vomiting to survive? Why?
  • Why do humans vomit?
  • What part of the brain triggers humans to vomit?

What To Do

  1. Start a discussion on how flies eat. Has anyone observed what flies do after they land on your plate?
  2. Using a model fly head (or diagrams) highlight the proboscis and its role in a fly’s feeding process.
  3. Demonstrate how a fly uses digestive enzymes to break down its food. Pour a little “fly vomit” (vinegar) onto the Jello, and stir it lightly. The vinegar will break down the Jello into a soupy mess that can be sucked up by the proboscis (turkey baster).  Teachers’s Tip: Cutting up the Jello into smaller pieces before you start makes this process faster.
  4. Discuss why humans vomit and when. What are the differences between the role that vomit plays between flies and humans?

Extensions

  • Investigate other animal species feeding habits.

Other Resources

How Stuff Works| How Houseflies Work

Video| What Really Happens When a Fly Lands on Your Food?

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