Most lay them on leaves so that when the catipillars are hatched, they have leaves to munch on. Some lay them on water too, depending on the type of butterfly.
Aas for the actual laying though, that's a quick process of 'spurting' the eggs out on to the area they are laying.
Butterflies lay eggs which hatch into caterpillars. The caterpillars grow until eventually they spin a cocoon which they stay inside until their wings are formed. They come out of the cocoon as butterflies and then they find other butterflies to mate with so that they can lay more eggs.
Butterflies don't protect their eggs. They just lay them on the underside of a leaf and fly away.
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It doesn't. Butterflies lay eggs and travel on to lay more eggs. They have no awareness of a little one left behind.
The babies of butterflies are caterpillar eggs.
No, the mother butterflies die soon after laying eggs.
Most butterflies don't lay their eggs in garbage. They typically lay their eggs on the plant that their caterpillars will feed on. Monarchs butterflies lay their eggs on milkweed plants. Spicebush swallowtails butterflies lay their eggs on Spicebush, Sassafras, Sweet Bay, and Prickly Ash. You get the idea. I don't know of any butterflies that lay their eggs in garbage, but if they do it is probably the type of garbage that their caterpillars would feed on.
Butterflies, like nearly all insects, lay eggs.
Butterflies protect themselves by the brightness of their wings showing their poisonous.
Butterflies do not have external plates, but they have an exoskeleton, which helps to support and protect its body.
No, the male flies do not lay eggs. Female flies are larger than male flies. The female flies lay over 900,000 eggs during their lifespan.
You should know this, but if you don't, butterflies lay eggs on leaves. They are so smart, they know where to put their eggs. If the butterflies doesn't know and puts it in a random leaf, that could be a problem.
butterfly fish reproduce by laying eggs in the sea
A. E. Tonge has written: 'Some moths and butterflies and their eggs' -- subject(s): Butterflies, Eggs, Moths
All of them.