go through your own
It goes through complete metamorphosis.
Yes, wasps undergo a complete metamorphosis with four stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. The egg hatches into a larva, which feeds and grows before transforming into a pupa. The adult wasp emerges from the pupa, completing the metamorphosis process.
Yellow jackets go through complete metamorphosis, which includes four distinct life stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. This process involves a complete transformation of the organism's body structure and behavior as it progresses through these stages.
Paper wasps undergo complete metamorphosis, which includes four stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. The egg hatches into a larva that later forms a pupa, eventually emerging as an adult wasp. Each stage looks very different from the others and serves a specific purpose in the wasp's development.
Grasshoppers do not go through a pupal stage. Insects fall into two major groups, holometabolous (complete metamorphosis: pupal stage) and hemimetabolous (incomplete metamorphosis: no pupal stage). Grasshoppers are hemimetabolous, like crickets, mayflies, stinkbugs, etc., and insects that undergoe incomplete metamorphosis do not have a pupal stage. Holometabolous insects such as flies, butterflies, beetles, wasps, etc. do undergoe complete metamorphosis and they all have a pupal stage.
No, like most insects, honey bees have a complete lifecycle (egg, larva, pupa, adult). Only insects such as cockroaches have an incomplete metamorphosis (egg, several stages of nymph or 'instar' then adult, with no larval/pupal stages)
Wasps breath through their skin.
yes
through a necter straw
Female sawflies have a needle-like ovipositor that they use to lay eggs inside plant tissues. They do not sting or bite humans, but can cause damage to plants by feeding on them or laying eggs in them. Sawflies undergo complete metamorphosis, with larvae resembling caterpillars and adults resembling wasps.
Wasps have long legs to help them catch and hold onto their prey, as well as to navigate through their environment more effectively.
butterflies, wasps, dragonflies, damselflies, frogs, toads, flies, bees,