Most insects can't survive in water and would drown.
Yes, frogs do eat larvae. In fact, many frog species primarily feed on larvae, such as mosquito larvae, as part of their diet. This helps control insect populations and maintains the balance of the ecosystem.
All insect larvae have six legs, like the adults. Caterpillars and some other types also have multiple prolegs, the stubby little balloon legs, but those aren't true legs and are lost while pupating into the adult insect. Beetle larvae don't have prolegs, just the six that will make it into the adult form.
Yes, a housefly undergoes four distinct stages in its life cycle: egg, larva (maggot), pupa, and adult. The eggs are laid in decaying organic matter, where they hatch into larvae. The larvae then pupate before emerging as adult flies. This complete metamorphosis is typical of many insect species.
there are 4000 streams in pakistan
I really believe that the B12 thing is exaggerated. How many vegans with pernicious anemia are there? You can get B12 from supplements and foods such as nutritional yeast, seaweed, and miso.
Gardens contain edible and ornamental, herbaceous and woody plants which attract many different kinds of insect larvae. In middle Georgia, peach tree pests furnish huge numbers of larvae, in gardens and orchards. Examples include the caterpillar stage of the oriental fruit moth (Grapholita molesta), the grub stage of Japanese beetles (Popillia japonica), and the larval stages of green June beetles (Cotinus nitida), peach tree borers (Synanthedon exitiosa, S. pictipes), plum curculio (Conotrachelus nenuphar), and shothole borers (Scolytus rugulosus).
It varys on what type of larvae it is. For instence there is the butterly larvae(caterpillar) the musquito larvae and many many other kinds of larvae. The musquito larave for instence eats dead and living organims. Mostly algae and microorganims though. I hope this answers your question
All salamanders are carnivorous: larger ones consume earthworms and adults and larvae of many insects; smaller species eat small insects, insect larvae and various small invertebrates. Larvae eat tadpoles, smaller salamander larvae and aquatic invertebrates
Bandicoots are nocturnal so they come out at night. Many a suburban gardener along Australia's eastern side has emerged in the morning to find pock-marks in his lawn, made by bandicoots digging for insect larvae.
It really depends entirely on the species of larvae you are referring to.
I guess it depends on what type of insect you're talking about. For instance, eggs of parasitic insects are called Nits. However, I believe this only applies to lice or creatures in the same sub-species.
it eats you mum