I am assuming that you are not American and that English is not your primary language due to your poor grammar ("Where can you find a caterpillar?" is the correct question, sir) ANYWAYS, caterpillars mostly reside on the leaves of bushes, trees, shrubs, etc. If you are looking for a particular kind of caterpillar, you should enter its name on this wonderful tool called Google and get more specific results. One last thing: Watch out for the really bright and colorful caterpillars, because those tend to be poisonous, and in some cases DEADLY. Good luck!
Catterpillars are found everywhere you just need to find them on a leaf on walls or anywhere.
If you are looking for a particular kind of caterpillar, you will be more likely to find one if you do some research into what kind of plant they eat and look there. Many butterflies and moths are quite choosy about where they lay their eggs.
you would find them hanging upside down in a tree
well the silk case is the cacoon of the moth larva. eventually it will hatch into a moth.
You would find a cell wall and chloroplasts.
You find the greatest number for the upper extreme and find the lowest number for the lower extreme.
they have to find a dick and suck it
you can find brine shrimp in the water
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Okay!
12 DAYS
No. They mostly eat their rabbit food and vegetables.
insect eating animals such as small birds, frogs other caterpilars or toads
its dead...or turning into a cocune
an eastern tent caterpillar
no they do not but they do eat decaying vegetation, fungi, lichen, plant leaves, damp paper and cardboard.
It will eather die in its cacoon or stay a catterpiller
The red stuff is actually miconium- a stored waste product of the larvae (caterpillar).
Well, it isn't a silent movie! I am guesing you mean: do the animals in the film "the Fox and the Hound" Speak? The answer to this question is: yes. They do. Apart from the catterpiller, Squeeks, and widow Tweed's farm animals, all of the animals talk.
well the silk case is the cacoon of the moth larva. eventually it will hatch into a moth.