The adult butterfly dies and eggs become a larvae.
The stem of the plant might bend and break.
The butterfly's larvae is a cattepillar.
No, it's a moth's larvae.
catapillers that turn into moths. A common misconception is that butterflies come from cocoons. They do not. Butterfly caterpillars shed their skin to become a chrysalis, which then sheds its exoskeleton to become a butterfly. The wrapping is silk around the caterpillar as a protective cocoon never occurs in butterfly larvae.
The Dutchman's pipe vine is poisonous to the Richmond Birdwing butterfly larvae. The butterfly lays its eggs on the vine, but when the larvae emerge and begin eating the vine, they are poisoned by the toxins.
No, it doesn't.
Ideally. When it is a larvae cabbage leaves, and once it is a butterfly nectar
A butterfly larva is called a caterpillar; moth larvae are called the same thing. Both insects undergo complete metamorphosis when the caterpillars enter their pupal stages, emerging in their adult forms.
Adult butterfly dies and eggs become larvae. :)
Egg--Larvae--Pupa--Adult
Gulf Flittilary butterfly larvae
Egg, Larvae/Caterpillar, Chrysalis/Cacoon, Butterfly/Moth.
No. Mosquito larvae graze over plant and rock matter in the water and eat bacteria and algae. Butterfly larvae eat plants on land.