Human decomposition happens about four miniutes after death has occurred. Soon the body begins to digest itself. The enzymes and bacteria in the intestine that normally release the acids that break down food begin to eat the body. Unable to maintain these bacteria in its staticity, the body loses its control of this bacteria.
Just before we die, DMT is released into the brain.
The house fly feeds on fluids that are released by the corpse, and therefore, they appear on the corpse in the early stages, while it is still moist. The house fly larvae feed on shit. There is also another variety of house fly that feeds on fluid, but it also feeds on other bugs, like maggots. The house fly lays massive clusters of eggs, and it only takes one day for them to all hatch. The eggs, of course, are laid on the corpse, and they migrate into the dead body after they become larvae.
The body becomes a big house for parasitic bugs, a giant battleground, a massive habitat all in itself. Food! The bugs eat and eat and eat.
Like with parasitic wasps. Parasitic wasps lay their eggs inside the larvae and pupas of the flies that eat the body. The wasps aren't there to decompose the body at all-- rather, they invade the invaders. Feed on the feeders. Such delicious poetic justice! One pupa on average will host 12 wasps.
The wasp's most favoritest, most delicioso meal is the bowfly. This is probably because the bowfly larvae are easily accessible. Bowflies are among the first to go to the dead body. It's like they can hardly wait to eat-- and they really like their rotting flesh. Bowflies can fly up to 20 km from their birthplace to find a delicious decaying body. And they can devour 60 percent of a corpse within a week.
Moths eat mammal hair, and they are the final eaters of the dead. The very last. They lay eggs in hair and eat hair and die and lay eggs in hair and eat hair and die. But they usually wait until affter all the other bugs are gone. They are the last bugs.