no
they dont eat
A butterfly comes out of a pupa or chrysalis.
'Baby' butterflies look like, in order, a grain of rice, a caterpillar, a pupa, an imago, then an adult.
No, a honeybee pupa does not eat. At this stage, the pupa is undergoing metamorphosis inside the sealed cell and is not actively feeding.
That is the correct spelling of "pupa" (a metamorphic stage in insects).
Spiders don't have a pupa.
blood
they don't eat anything
ants do eat butterflies
i hate science go get your anser some where else
The same same as all butterflies. Egg, caterpillar, chrysalis/pupa, adult.
The larva eats, but the pupa can't
The adult is the butterfly, so those are not 2 different stages. But other than that, yes, those are the stages. In most groups of butterflies, the special term for the pupa is "chrysalis", but the generic term "pupa" applies to that stage in all insects, so you can never go wrong using "pupa". (I'm glad to see you didn't use "cocoon", as that term does not apply to butterflies, only certain moths.) :)