Mutations of the common housefly (musca domestica).
Seedlings of a visionary intelligently-designed in-vivo evolutionary assistance.
A hyper-evolved instance of Musca domestica.
Housefly. The housefly (Musca domestica) is a fly of the suborder Cyclorrhapha. It is believed to have evolved in the Cenozoic era, possibly in the Middle East, and has spread all over the world as a commensal of humans. It is the most common fly species found in houses.
While it's not the first time I've come across a more beautiful, non-irritant, [seemingly] more considerate and accommotable to human tastes and disposition, I was unable to capture the first one and the second one, of a completely au[x]tigomous heraldry from this photographically-captured one, thanks to better fortune in life, as well as better battery-life on mobile devices. As well, given the small size of a fly within the context of the telescoping focal aperture of amobile device camera (which is more commonly set to the Hardware Abstraction Layer (HAL) of component design, given the framework of the parts used to build phones and tablets).
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This version of housefly is slightly larger than the common fly and is more like a domesticated and intelligent creature, compared to Musca domestica. |
I adjusted various color and lighting features of these photos in order to highlight a truer color representation of the fly itself.
What's significant about this ad-hoc encounter with a years-old companion (the hyper-evolved housefly) is that [for me] it inspires a belief in the robustness of science and technology in the modern day to improve speciæs through genetic engineering.
LOL. I think I may have come off as unbeknownst egotistical in how that last bit was phrased, as far as how I had typed it; at least. It was somewhat a quote, and I'd like the purity of the moment to exist beyond that which had not gone to have been documented or acknowledged.
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