Two is the number of pairs of eyes that the whirligig beetle [Gyrinidae family] has. A pair on the top of the beetle's head sees clearly above water. A pair on the bottom sees clearly underwater.
so they can see
no instead they have many pairs of eyes
A museum beetle has four wings grouped into pairs. The front wings act as protection for hind wings and breathing pores.
Probably dragonflies, with as many as 30000 facets in each of their compound eyes.
Scorpions have two eyes on the top of there head and usually two to five pairs of eyes along the front corners of there head.
they have 4 wings a top wing and a bottom wing
Spiders occur in a great variety of sizes, and many (if not most) have 8 eyes (four pairs), so your task might be a bit complicated depending on which two eyes you are measuring and on which spider.
No, a locust is an insect and has six legs.
A tiger beetle has six legs.
Rhino beetles like most other beetles have 2 pairs of wings, 4 wings in total. However, the front pair of wings are not used in flight. They have evolved into hard covers called elytra which protect the hind wings which are folded up underneath them when the beetle is not flying.
The current records are 19 in a New Beetle, and 17 in a 1971 Beetle.
Many forms of insects spend their immature stages in the water as larvae and nymphs. Among these are dragonflies, damselflies, mayflies, mosquitos, midges, gnats, and scorpionflies. There are fewer adult insects that have adapted to an aquatic environment. Among these are some beetles and true bugs such as: the whirligig beetle and water strider, respectively.
MANY