Reptiles do not undergo a larval or pupal stage like some amphibians or insects. Instead, they typically begin life as eggs, which hatch into juvenile reptiles that resemble miniature adults. As they grow, they undergo a series of physical changes, but they do not have distinct life stages like larvae or pupae. Therefore, the life cycle of reptiles consists of egg, juvenile, and adult stages.
The stage after the larva stage is typically the pupa stage. During this stage, the insect undergoes metamorphosis and transforms into its adult form. The pupa is often enclosed in a protective casing, such as a cocoon or chrysalis, depending on the species.
No. Insects and amphibians go through a larva stage. Larvae is the intermediate state between when something hatches and the adult stage. Baby snakes and lizards are just that, and don't start out as something else like a caterpillar or a tadpole.
first you start out with the egg. then the larva(mealworm). then a pup.Last but not least the beetle!!!!!!!
1.First they start out as an egg 2.Next to a larva 3.Then to a pupa 4.Finally an adult
butterfly, dragonfly, almost all beetles, mosquitos, bees and ants i guess almost all insects have 4.... they start as egg, then larvae, then enter metamorphosis in pupa stage... then adult...
infaney
Echinoderms have swimming larvae that are bilaterally symmetrical, with left and right sides, but they do not 'develop into' bottom-living adult echinoderms, which are radially symmetrical, often star-shaped. The juvenile (young adult), radial from the start, grows from a group of stem cells within the larva. It gradually moves to the outside of the larva, and the larva and juvenile develop side-by-side. In most cases, the larva eventually settles and shrivels, and the juvenile crawls away. In one species of starfish, however, the juvenile drops off the swimming larva, which can go on swimming for a further three months.
Butterflies: They start as eggs, hatch into caterpillars (larvae), form a pupa (chrysalis), and emerge as adults. Beetles: They undergo four stages - egg, grub (larva), pupa, and adult. Flies: Their metamorphosis includes egg, maggot (larva), pupa, and adult (fly). Bees: The life cycle involves egg, larva, pupa (in a cell), and adult bee.
zoea larva
All geckos start out as hatching's. They then hit a juvenile stage by about 2-6months of age. shortly following the juvenile stage is the sub adult which would be the stage that lasts until maturity.
um i learned this in like second grade they are in the proses of growing there wings in the cocoon and when they are fully developed they back free of the cocoon scientific version flowing.... its in between the start of thePupa: The Transition Stage to the end of it the stage when it becomes the adult
The animal you see is the adult, so no, they do not grow into a larva. The female lays eggs in the fall of the year. The egg case looks like a bit of foam, brown, about an inch across. In the spring, hundreds of baby mantids come out, and start hunting. They grow into adults.