Insects that have more than one lifestage, like the damselfly metamorphose.
They spend the bulk of their lives as an aquatic nymph and become a flying adult for reproduction.
Other insects do not morphose. Ex.
Grasshoppers have several stages but the hatchling is basically a small version of the adult, called an Imago.
No. Damselflies are insects and thus invertebrates.
No. Damselflies are considered beneficial, as they eat insects such as mosquitoes.
No, they're another order entirely. Dragonflies are part of order Odonata, lacewings are Neuroptera. Dragonflies have incomplete metamorphosis with a nymph and no pupa, lacewings have a larva and pupa stage. ^^
Yes. Damselflies are a variety of small, delicate insects related to dragonflies.
Damselflies eat other flying insects, particularly midges and mosquitoes.
Damselflies are not a family, they make up the suborder Zygoptera, which contains 14 families.
A wasp
Damselflies do not bite people. They don't have enough power to bite and even if they did not enough to break the skin
i hate u
nymphs
dragonflies and damselflies
Phylum Arthropoda ==> Hexapoda ==> Insecta ==> Odonata (dragon/damselflies). Within Odonata, dragonflies are Anisoptera, damselflies are Zygoptera.
A damselfly eats poo