no the cannot i think
Actually if it is a moth it probably will form it's cocoon underground without a branch. A butterfly chrysalis cannot be formed without a branch.
a caterpillar forms from a cocoon
caterpillars store their food before they form the cocoon.
A butterfly's larva is generally referred to as a caterpillar. When they are ready to mature, they will form a cocoon and remain inside during their transformation into a butterfly.
A frog's metamorphosis is from a tadpole to a froglet, and a butterfly is from a caterpillar to, well, a butterfly.
It depends on what type of caterpillar it is. Most become butterflies, but some turn into moths. +++ More precisely, each caterpillar variety is the larva of its own species of moth or butterfly.
Butterflies don't make cocoons - caterpillars do. They produce silk (similar to a spider) which they form into a cocoon while they change from caterpillar to butterfly.
They emerge from their cocoons about ten days after spinning them.
Yes, there are. Some moth's caterpillars grow in the spring. Like the caterpillar with a white stripe and is brown. (Later turns blue or purple.)
When a caterpillar enters its chrysalis, it becomes a gooey liquid, thus having no form. Then, God miraculously transformes it into a crinkled, moist, baby butterfly.
Insects use a pupa when they change from one form to another. The pupa is called a cocoon if it is a moth. It is called a chrysalis if it is a butterfly.
The plural form for the noun cocoon is cocoons.
The plural form for the noun cocoon is cocoons.