Well.......they are both endangered (obviously) and they both produce their young sexually, but the monarch butterfly and the ground squirrel are not closely related at all.
Moths lay eggs that hatch into caterpillars just like butterflies do. Only after it forms and hatches from its cacoon does it resemble the adult moth.
Many butterflies use eye spots, like peacocks, for defense. The spots are a common form of defense that use a pattern on the top, underneath, or both sides or their front and back wings. Some butterfly species have two large eye spots on their rear wings. When a predator approaches, the butterfly will suddenly show its eye spots and frighten the would-be attacker away.
Butterflies do not care for their young as other animals do. They lay eggs on plants that their offspring can eat and that is the end of their care. Blue Morpho butterflies lay eggs on several plants including the pea plant family the caterpillars prefer.
Caterpillar
The adjectives in that sentence are young and hugeand the nouns are zebra and lions and the verb is devour and there isn't an adverb.
Caterpillars are the young - of moths and butterflies.
A young adult is in there early 20's where as an adult is in there 30'. A young adult can marry an adult.
A Monarch lays eggs, and an egg will hatch into a caterpillar.
no they leave them
They don't.
Butterflies and moths go through a life cycle known as complete metamorphosis. The stages of their life cycle include: egg, larva, pupa, and adult.