no.
no god created every thing butterflies are butterflies and moths are moths. You don't have to believe it for it to be true and i know and believe this to be true
The butterflies and moths are cousins because they are the same by they wings, some of them but it"s cool.................
Butterflies have complete metamorphosis and grasshoppers have incomplete metamorphosis.
moths pretty much do the same thing as butterflies. they eat necter.
Moths and butterflies both fall under the genus of Lepidoptera. The study of butterflies and moths is known as lepidoptery. This is a branch of biology and the people specializing in this study are known as lepidopterists.
The Blue Morpho Butterfly life cycle is the same as all butterflies. During the life cycle, the larvae can be referred to as the baby.
Mottephobia or Lepidopterophobia. Answer 2 by Terrier23: Since there is no actual name for the fear of butterflies, they use these two because they are for the phobia of moths, and moths and butterflies are practically the same. Mottephobia is the fear of moths with Lepidopterophobia is the fear of Jipsy Moths
A common classification of the Lepidoptera involves their differentiation into butterflies and moths. Butterflies are a natural monophyletic group, often given the sub-orderRhopalocera, which includes Papilionoidea (true butterflies), Hesperiidae (skippers), and Hedylidae (butterfly moths). In this taxonomic scheme moths belong to the sub-orderHeterocera. Other taxonomic schemes have been proposed; the most common putting the butterflies into the sub-order Ditrysia and then the "super-family" Papilionoidea, and ignoring a classification for moths. None of the taxonomic schemes are perfect, however, and taxonomists commonly argue over how to define the obvious differences between butterflies and moths.
Those who study or collect butterflies and/or moths are called lepidopterists. The word comes from the taxonomic order to which butterflies and moths belong: Lepidoptera.
The Luna moth belongs to the same order as all butterflies and moths: Lepidoptera.
No, they're not the same water beetles live in the water and beetles live on land.
No, a pupa and a nymph are not the same. A pupa is a developmental stage in the life cycle of insects like butterflies and moths, where the organism undergoes transformation within a protective casing. In contrast, a nymph is an immature form of certain insects, such as grasshoppers and dragonflies, that resembles a small adult and typically undergoes several molts before reaching maturity.