butterflies
Complete metamorphosis have four stages in a life cycle or more and the incomplete only has three stages.
An example of complete metamorphisis is when a caterpillar changes completely into a butterfly and incomplete metamorphisis is like a cockroach, it hatches and looks like a small adult cockroach and just grows bigger.
Neither. Alligators are not a species which undergo metamorphosis. Incidentally, why was this classified under Slugs and Snails?
Incomplete metamorphosis involves the animal slowly growing larger through successive moults. The young are called nymphs, and their wings grow externally (like buds) in the early instars. (Eg. grasshoppers, cicadas,etc.) Complete metamorphosis involves separate stages of development; larvae, pupa and adult. (About 90% of insects, including butterflies)
a fly and fish
Hi , Mostly Insects : Egg ---» Larvae ---» Pupae ---» Adult And there are some insects (10%) that undergo an incomplete change, or skipping the pupae phase. like dragonflies, grasshoppers and cockroaches
Incomplete describes the metamorphosis of the centipede. The arthropod in question (Chilopoda class) goes through three incomplete -- not four complete -- stages in its life cycle and natural history as an egg that hatches into an adult-like nymph which becomes the adult.
three
Two types of metamorphosis are complete metamorphosis and incomplete metamorphosis. In complete metamorphosis, organisms go through four distinct stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. In incomplete metamorphosis, organisms go through three stages: egg, nymph, and adult.
Complete metamorphosis is the description for the white pine weevil. The insect in question (Pissodes strobi [Peck]) passes through four complete -- not three incomplete -- stages in its life cycle and natural history from egg to larva to pupa to adult.
Egg nymth and adult
Metamorphosis is basically the cycle through which an insect matures. Complete metamorphosis consist of four stages : egg, larva, pupa and adult. While incomplete metamorphosis has three stages: egg, nymph and adult.