"Limestone, under certain conditions, may become marble". -Getis Introduction to Geography.
No, grasshoppers undergo incomplete metamorphosis. They go through three stages: egg, nymph, and adult. The nymphs resemble smaller versions of the adults and do not have a pupal stage like insects that undergo complete metamorphosis.
Limestone or chalk is a sedimentary rock composed of Calcium carbonate or calcium carbonate compounds where the inner core may undergo change by heat and pressure to become hard chert.However when it undergoes metamorphosis by extreme heat and pressure over time it turns into marble.
No, white pine weevils undergo complete metamorphosis. They go through four life stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. Incomplete metamorphosis involves three stages: egg, nymph, and adult, where the immature forms (nymphs) resemble smaller versions of the adults.
Animals that go through metamorphosis include insects like butterflies, beetles, and moths, as well as amphibians like frogs and toads. During metamorphosis, these animals undergo drastic physical changes as they transition from one life stage to another.
Amphibians typically start as eggs that hatch into larvae (like tadpoles) and undergo metamorphosis into adult forms. They may have aquatic larval stages and terrestrial adult stages. Their growth is influenced by factors like temperature, food availability, and environmental conditions.
The grasshopper does not undergo complete metamorphosis
Most amphibians undergo metamorphosis during development. The axolotl is an amphibian that does not undergo true metamorphosis, remaining in a semi-juvenile state.
The kangaroo does not undergo metamorphosis at all.
No. Kangaroos are marsupials, and marsupials do not undergo metamorphosis. This is usually restricted to insects and amphibians.
they go to the incomplete metamorphosis
Rattlesnakes do not undergo metamorphosis.
No.
Apes do not undergo a form of metamorphosis.
In the egg.
I'm gonna say complete metamorphosis because they undergo internal fertilization the same as humans
no
the answer is metamorphosis.