Yes. I believe we go through incomplete metamorphosis.
yes
Some animals go through different stages in their life. This is known as indirect development or metamorphosis, examples are toads (which are born as tadpoles) and butterflies (which are born caterpillars).
I had always thought that a complete metamorphosis involved a pupae stage. The argument that a froglet, being just a smaller version of an adult frog, might lead one to believe that humans (post natal) undergo a similar bypass of the pupae stage, in that as human babies, they do resemble humans, but are grossly dissimilar in proportion, human's baby's heads being about 1/3 of their total body length.Incomplete.
No, humans don't breathe through their skin. They breathe through their nose and mouth.
What humans do with their nose?
I'm pretty sure that humans undergo an incomplete metamorphosis.
I'm gonna say complete metamorphosis because they undergo internal fertilization the same as humans
yes
No, like most insects, honey bees have a complete lifecycle (egg, larva, pupa, adult). Only insects such as cockroaches have an incomplete metamorphosis (egg, several stages of nymph or 'instar' then adult, with no larval/pupal stages)
One characteristic that identifies beetles is the hardened forewings they have that cover their bodies. Their front wings are hard, leathery, or thickened and meet in the middle of their back in a straight line. They go through a complete metamorphosis.
Some animals go through different stages in their life. This is known as indirect development or metamorphosis, examples are toads (which are born as tadpoles) and butterflies (which are born caterpillars).
no. they are the same basic shape of a 'mini adult' example: frogs are not mini adults. they are tadpoles and undergo metamorphosis until they are frogs. note: metamorphosis is NOT evolution
Metamorphosis doesn't occur in human because it is transformation from immuture creature to an adult. In case of human, we observe that from infancy to old age no such transformation occurr. Hence we can say that there is no metamorphosis appearantly
There are any number of ways to divide up a person's development. The most general is preschool covering to age 6, school-age to age 18, and adulthood 19 and on.
I had always thought that a complete metamorphosis involved a pupae stage. The argument that a froglet, being just a smaller version of an adult frog, might lead one to believe that humans (post natal) undergo a similar bypass of the pupae stage, in that as human babies, they do resemble humans, but are grossly dissimilar in proportion, human's baby's heads being about 1/3 of their total body length.Incomplete.
Reading view of humans contrast the tucson zoo and straw into gold in he Metamorphosis of the Everyday.
Mammals actually have less changes in their life cycle than insects or amphibians. Humans go through about three stages of significance in their life time.