Most people would consider a fly's wings to be transparent. This is because the wings are virtually see-through to the human eye.
yes
GREEN DARNER DRAGONFLY
Noting that spiders do not have wings while flies do
Clair (ou transparent)
Transparent tape was originally made from celluloid. All of the windows were transparent except the one in the bathroom. His motives for passing the law were transparent to his colleagues.
None. Flies have legs. Six legs to be percise. And two wings. Two antannae. One probiscus.
No, their wings are transparent.
A grasshopper has thick, leathery like wings that cover their transparent wings. A grasshopper is a flying insect that can change colors.
A grasshopper has thick leathery wings that cover transparent wings.
The wings are transparent but the rest of it's body is opaque. Dragonflies are awesome.Submitted by Mickey
It depends on the type of fly, but in general, most insect wings are transparent. The biggest exception being moths and butterflies, which have transparent wings covered with small 'feathers.' And many beetles have a set of wings that are hard and protect the inner wings.
A dragonfly flies by flapping its 4 large (but thin and transparent) wings. Dragonflies can beat their wings up to 40 times per second, and fly at up to 30 km/hour (18.6 mph).
Certain types of flies have a clear transparent abdomen. They also have clear wings and black spots on the body.
The wings of a glass wing butterfly are transparent, while the painted lady butterfly's wings are not transparent.
The world s ant
They have thick leathery wings that sit above the transparent wings.
The world s ant
Simply because they are so thin and free of pigment.