in really
fuzzy dirt
no.
I really don't think that worms hibernate. Only mammals.
in fact, moles do not hibernate. and neither do worms. and neither of these two fly, either.
Isabella tiger moths
People who believe woolly worms can predict the weather think that a narrow red-brown band means a harsh winter. The wider the red-brown band is, the milder the coming winter is supposed to be.
It does not turn into a butterfly at all. It turns into the Isabella Tiger Moth.
i think they use the soil and it helps by using the nutrients in it to regulate
yes woolly worms bite and they sting and itch real bad they also leave a lot of red marks after they bite you experienced been biten before
Worms use their muscles and setae, short bristly hairs, to move. The setae help them control their speed, and latch on to the ground. They have two kinds of muscles: circular and longitudinal. When they tighten their circular muscles they become long and thin, and their front end moves forward. Then they contract their longitudinal muscles to move their back end toward their front end.
Like elephants, they just slept on their sides, in their herd. They were light sleepers and stayed awake for most of the day to be on watch for predators. They just slept on the ground, but probably behind something like a rock or by a cave.
There are four types of the South American Woolly Monkey -Brown Woolly Monkey, (Lagothrix lagotricha) -Gray Woolly Monkey, (Lagothrix cana) -Colombian Woolly Monkey, (Lagothrix lugens) -Silvery Woolly Monkey, (Lagothrix poeppigii)
A caveman, a cave bear, a woolly rhinoceros, a woolly mammoth, and a woolly bison.