male and female
As larval they are immature animals and undergoes metamophosis, e.g., tadpole.
When a bird's old feathers fall out, sometimes all together but normally staggered so it isn't completely naked, and new ones grow.
Grub mostly: are the larval stage beetles and live under ground, and are omnivores Caterpillars mostly: are larval stage of butterflies, moths, and a few others and mostly live above ground eating tree leaves there are exceptions
There is no difference between a tadpole and frog, a tadpole is just a baby frog still growing, it is the "larval" stage whereas the grown (and sexually mature) frog is the "adult".
The best-known type of silk is made by the larval form of Bombyx mori, more commonly known as the silkworm. These are no longer found naturally in the wild, so they have to to kept domestically for sericulture (the practice of rearing silkworms for production of silk).
the similarity of the larval and pupal stage is that the are both kinda still an egg. so when a bug is born they are a larval which is like a little wormy maggot thingy. and a pupal is a more developed wormy thingy. and then they grow into a bug.
No. The two insects will not mate with each other. And if a female of one is inseminated with semen from the other, fertilization will not occur. There is too great a difference between the two for fertility to result.
The female lays between 50,000 to 1 million eggs which are almost microscopic. They hatch within 24 hours, and develop into larval stages.
No reptiles do not have a larval stage.
Silk "worms" are actually the larval form of the domestic silk moth (Bombyx mori). The silkworms are raised on a diet of only white mulberry (Morus alba) leaves until they enter the pupal stage. The cocoons which the silkworms make are then used to make silk.
The female lays about 200,000 eggs (this figure dramatically varies between families, genera, species and also individuals). The female hangs these eggs in strings from the ceiling of her lair, or individually attaches them to the substratum depending on the species. The female cares for the eggs, guarding them against predators, and gently blowing currents of water over them so that they get enough oxygen. The female does not eat during the roughly one-month period spent taking care of the unhatched eggs. At around the time the eggs hatch, the mother dies and the young larval octopuses spend a period of time drifting in clouds of plankton, where they feed on copepods, larval crabs and larval starfish until they are ready to sink down to the bottom of the ocean, where the cycle repeats itself. In some deeper dwelling species, the young do not go through this period. This is a dangerous time for the larval octopuses; as they become part of the plankton cloud they are vulnerable to many plankton eaters.For the source and more detailed information concerning this subject, click on the related links section (Answers.com) indicated below.
Larval cnidarians.