A dragonfly's wings is clear and a butterfly's is colorful.
There are a number of ways in which the wings of a butterfly different from those of a dragonfly. The butterfly has colored wings while the dragonfly has clear ones, the sizes are or quite different among others.
Its wings... the way its wings flap around so fast, they would outrun its pray.
Well dragonflies prey on mosquitoes or other bugs, and butterflies spread or eat pollen. srry I don't know that much about them but that's all I know, oh yeah and they look different....
Answer:No, the dragonfly is not a decendent of dinosaurs. There's no way the decendents of dinosaurs can gradually develop an extra set of wings, a change in body shape, a change from vertebrate to invertebrate etc.
The transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly is an example of metamorphosis in nature. During this process, the caterpillar undergoes dramatic changes in its body structure and form as it develops into a completely different organism with wings and a different way of life.
Birds have bones; butterflies don't have bones. Butterflies have an exoskeleton; birds have an endoskeleton. Birds have feathers; butterflies have scales. Birds have two wings; Butterflies have four. Birds have two legs; butterflies have six. Birds have beaks; butterflies have antennae.
There is no possible way to prove this, but what you're referencing is called chaos theory. The idea is that small, seemingly meaningless things happen and cause larger events - like hurricanes and tornadoes. If the butterfly hadn't flapped its wings, would there have been a tornado? There's no way to know because (a) we don't have time travel and (b) the flap of a butterfly's wings are hard to measure... there are lots of butterflies. A lot of things have to go "right" in order for anything to happen, but I don't think a butterfly alone could have caused a tornado.
Birds flap their wings while aeroplane do not flap their wings. aeroplane uses engines
it isnt really that different but it is just the way they do thier cacoons and thst kindof stuff
Butterfly wings come as a result of ordinary color, which is part of the light spectrum. Whatever colors are visible on a butterfly wing are the ones that get reflected back to the human eye. Wings are also colored structurally, which means the way that they develop, often in three tiny layers on the wing, influences the colors seen.
No they are not. Homologus structures are structures that originated from a common ancestor, they show similarity in anatomy and development even tho they may have different functions. For example the human arm and bird wing are homologus (pentadactyl limb).Bird and insect wings are ANALOGUS, which means they show similar function but show no similar structural relationship.
cause u see it that way