No. The young is a maggot.
No. The young is a maggot.
sort of Tadpoles do not look like adult frogs, if that's what you mean.
The younger butterfly may have a similar pattern to the adult
a small version of the adult
No larval stage is the maggot (as in housefly) then they pupate and the adult emerges after metamorphosis. Those insects where the nymphs adults look like adults have only a 3-stage cycle egg, nymph, adult, with no larval or pupal stage.
No they do not. Baby peacocks look brown. kinda look like a turkey.
With the grasshopper the eggs hatch into animals that look like little adults. With butterflies the immature animals look nothing like the adult and live of different food. Also there is a "pupal" phase between the caterpillar and the butterfly.
how do cougars look different from there young
No larval stage is the maggot (as in housefly) then they pupate and the adult emerges after metamorphosis. Those insects where the nymphs adults look like adults have only a 3-stage cycle egg, nymph, adult, with no larval or pupal stage.
I would assume a grown adult toad would look like a young toad just maybe bigger.
Yes. Mother platypuses look after the young platypuses, nursing them until they are independent. Even then, the platypuses may stay with their mother until they are ready to reproduce, at about two years of age. The male platypus has no part in raising the young.
Yes and No. No because they are smaller than the adult. Yes because they are the same colors.