The puss moth caterpillar has a furry light brown color and will turn into a puss moth. They are one of the most toxic caterpillars. Another furry caterpillar is the wooly bear but it is brown and black and it turns into a wooly bear tiger moth.
Most likely, it is a species of Wooly Bear caterpillar. It will probably turn into a Tiger Moth.
One black and tan furry caterpillar is the wooly bear caterpillar which turns into the Tiger moth. Some caterpillars turn into moths or butterflies.
A hairy caterpillar is most likely to be a moth. If a caterpillar is hairy and fuzzy and long in length it must be a moth larva.
Moth
The caterpillar that is black with brown spots and has spikes on top of spikes is the passion butterfly. These caterpillars feed from the passionflower.
probably a monarch butterfly. its light green and comes from a yellow black and white striped caterpillar. it turns into a bright orange and black butterfly
It can be difficult to determine what kind of butterfly a black and orange striped caterpillar will turn into because there is more than one type of caterpillar that fits that description. Most likely it will turn into a monarch butterfly, which is a very common insect in many parts of the world.
The Foley Mountain caterpillar turns into a Foley Mountain Butterfly. This happens after they hatch from the chrysalis that they spin.
The Clouded Magpie caterpillar turns into a Clouded Magpie Moth
This caterpillar is from the Gulf Fritillary (Agraulis vanillae), also known as the Passion Butterfly. They feed exclusively on species of passionflower.
KalabiekuesthaTS NOT THE NAME OF THE CATERPILLAR UNLESS YOU SPELLED IT WRONG CUZ THAT sounds like me caterpillar fuzzy black and one orange stripe down its back and orange feet
what kind of caterpiller is bright yellow with black strip down its back
There are many different kinds of caterpillars. There is a specific website that is designed to tell you what kind of caterpillar it is. The website is http://www.discoverlife.org/20/q?guide=Caterpillars.
It can be a Monarch caterpillar or a Northern Florida caterpillar.
Young caterpillars develop in the egg, but there's also kind of an embryonal development from caterpillar to butterfly in the pupa.
There are over 70 different species of caterpillars and butterflies, but I strongly believe that the caterpillar you are describing is simply the Monarch Butterfly, one of the most well-known species of butterfly on Earth. The caterpillar of such, is all black with different shades of orange and yellow stripes lining its back and neck. It has two tiny antenna on its black head. See attached page for more information: http://www.monarch-butterfly.com/