A grub.
It is called mealworms.
i know that rats eat mealworms, the baby versions of grain beetles, but i still dont know about beetles.
it is called a calf
A scarab beetle's baby is the child that is layed by the scarab beetle.
They look like little beetles
Where I live I hear these beetles making a rattle noise. And we all know snakes. I can hear the beetles now. It's beautiful.
Baby stag beetles are called larvae. After hatching from eggs, they go through several stages of development known as instars before maturing into adult beetles. The larval stage is crucial for growth, as larvae typically feed on decaying wood or organic matter. Once they complete their development, they pupate and eventually emerge as adult stag beetles.
American Burying Beetles, Asian Longhorned Beetles, Hungerford's Crawling Water Beetles, Multicolored Asian Lady Beetles, Six-Banded Longhorn Beetles, Cantrall's Bog Beetles, Black Lordithon Rove Beetles, Douglas Stenelmis Riffle Beetles, Leaf Beetles, Dryopid Beetles, Predaceous Diving Beetles, Whirligig Beetles, Crawling Water Beetles, Minute Moss Beetles, Water Scavenger Beetles, Firefly Beetles, Travertine Beetles, Burrowing Water Beetles, Water Pennies, Toad-Winged Beetles, Marsh Beetles, Emerald Ash Borer, Cottonwood Borer, and many more types of beetles live in Michigan.
There are many types of beetles found on Long Island. This includes, powder post beetles, Asian beetles, bark beetles, citrus long horned beetles, old house beetles, and the ladybug.
Grubs! You know those ugly grayish-white grubs you dig up sometimes when digging in the spring? They are most likely the larval form of Japanese beetles - and guess what they feed on, before they hatch out of the ground to feast on your garden plants? They feed on the roots of your lawn! (There are a few other kinds of grubs that also eat grass roots - namely chafer beetle grubs and June beetle grubs - but at least their adult versions don't decimate our fruits and vegetables and flower gardens as well!)
carrion beetles are that kind of beetles
The Lady Beetles (as the entomologists prefer) have the females lay the eggs. This is part of the defining character of being female.