It's an old wive's tale, but typically the darker the caterpillar, the worse the winter is going to be. The lighter the caterpillar, the calmer the winter is going to be. Other than that... I dunno. If it bothers you, spray paint them! LoL
Some herbivores are Cows, Rabbits, Caterpillars and Ostriches.
yes. they are catergorized with caterpillars and eat all sorts of vegitation.
If something is clear, the light simply passes through the object. If something is white the light is all reflected, black it is all absorbed, clear, it would pass through. (White) |<---> |<---> (Black) |<---- |<---- (Clear) <---|<--- <---|<---
All Red, no white.
If you have a hole in the mouth with a white line around where a tooth use to be mean that you have a tooth coming back in. I would go to the doctor and have them check it out.
If you see white caterpillars in trees, they could be Hyphantria cunea. When they morph into adults in northern areas, they usually have white wings. In the south they usually have white wings with dark spots on the fore-wings.
Really, nothing at all. They have the same colors, when they are caterpillars and when they are butterflies, so, (SOME) a caterpillar can be blue and white and the butterfly (COULD) turns out blue and white.
According to the Farmer's Almanac, if a caterpillar is wooly and all white with a black stripe down the middle, it could be a bad winter. A plain white wooly caterpillar means a very bad winter.
Yes, caterpillars can surely eat spinach. In fact, many gardeners and crop growers complain of caterpillars eating all their spinach gardens.
There are far too many insect eating birds that would eat caterpillars to list them all here.
No. There are many kind of woolly or hairy caterpillars and they all eat very specific types of leaf.
The mass of all caterpillars is greater.
Fritillary caterpillars, for example, do not spend all of their time on the foliage of their ... instead hiding in leaf litter or low vegetation during the daytime/Hope this helps,-Drew
All caterpillars eventually turn into butterflies.
no
They are nests of gypsy moth caterpillars. They can strip a tree of all of its leaves in a matter of days, killing the trees.
Some caterpillars do in fact eat greenflies. Not all caterpillars will eat greenflies or like insects because they don't like them.