The youngest mosquitoes are larvae, which do not resemble adult mosquitoes. However, after exiting that stage of their life, they resemble small adults.
no. young bees are in a larvae form. they then form a cocoon before emerging out as an adult bee. note: most flying insects started out as larvae form in the early stage
black and yellow hope it helps
No
No. The young is a maggot.
No. The young is a maggot.
sort of Tadpoles do not look like adult frogs, if that's what you mean.
Fly eggs produce a maggot that pupates and then hatches into an adult fly so the young are not small adults. Insects, like Grasshoppers hatch out resembling a small adult called an Imago.
The younger butterfly may have a similar pattern to the adult
a small version of the adult
No they do not. Baby peacocks look brown. kinda look like a turkey.
With the grasshopper the eggs hatch into animals that look like little adults. With butterflies the immature animals look nothing like the adult and live of different food. Also there is a "pupal" phase between the caterpillar and the butterfly.
how do cougars look different from there young
Snap bugs look like a cross between a beetle and a slug. They look hard like a beetle but are shaped like a slug with antennas.
I would assume a grown adult toad would look like a young toad just maybe bigger.
Larder Beetle's look like a british horse coach (insect). Like most bettles, they haw browny black skin and a round body.