A chrysalis
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Danger, Says: "Larve"
A butterfly in its larval stage is called a caterpillar.
Yes, that is correct.
The proper term is pupa. The butterfly pupa is the cocoon or the chrysalis that the butterfly creates to protect him during metamorphosis.
The common name of a butterfly's pupa stage is its cocoon stage. This is the part of the butterfly's life where they transform from a larva to a butterfly.
Nope. The pupa does not feed.
There is no such thing as a baby butterfly, they are born as adults. here is the way it works. A Butterfly lays eggs, these eggs hatch into caterpillar's, the caterpillars seal themselves into pupa or chrysalis inside of which they grow into an adult butterfly, when the time is right an adult butterfly breaks out of the pupa/chrysalis a lot like a chick coming from an egg and you have an adult butterfly ready to mate with other butterfly's that lay eggs once again. The closest thing to a baby butterfly will be the Caterpillar.
Insects use a pupa when they change from one form to another. The pupa is called a cocoon if it is a moth. It is called a chrysalis if it is a butterfly.
nothing
The pupa is the stage of metamorphosis during which a caterpillar transforms into a butterfly.
The Pupa Changes Into a Butterfly - 1908 was released on: USA: 13 June 1908