Adults yes, eggs no. They are protected until hatch. Best thing is wait 2 weeks and fog again. ASAPEST.com
Yes, all insects hatch from eggs. However they hatch as larvae not adults. Between the larvae stage and the adult stage insects become pupa.
The downy woodpecker forages on trunks and branches. It chips and probes for insect eggs, larvae, and cocoons. It also eats adult insects, nuts, seeds and bird seed.
An example of parisitism is of wasps and larvae of other insects. The wasps lay their eggs and when the larvae hatches it eats the other insect's larvae.
The adult butterfly dies and eggs become a larvae.
Eggs, which hatch into Larvae, which Pupate and emerge as adult bees much the same as other holometabolic insects (those which perform complete metamorphosis).
To eat or lay eggs to develop into larvae. galls in saplings are caused by insects
all arachnids start out as eggs, and most insects do also, but insects that settle in watery areas can start as larvae. ex. mosquitos
The Dipper eats insects and their larvae, fish eggs, and small fish.
Moths will lay eggs in clothes, and the larvae will later eat the fabric.
The larvae emerge as caterpillars.
[1] Oregano oil can be used to control problem insects at two different life stages. [2] One stage is the adult stage, during which eggs are laid. Oregano oil keeps insects from laying eggs. [3] All's not lost if eggs have been laid. Oregano oil can also be applied to the larval stage, into which eggs hatch. The oil keeps larvae from passing into the adult stage, and therefore from reproducing.
There are four stages to the life cycle of a glowworm - eggs, larvae, pupa or cocoon, adult fly. They glow at the larvae stage.