incomplete
complete metamorphosis: butterfly fly incomplete metamorphosis: cockroach grasshopper
I don't know too many insects that go through a complete metamorphosis, but I know that a fly, butterfly, moth, beetle, ants, bees, ladybugs and cockroach . Just a fun fact: about 88% of insects go through a complete metamorphosis.
It is as an adult that a fly looks like its parents.Specifically, flies go through a life cycle of complete metamorphosis. The metamorphosis is complete because it involves four stages (egg, larvae, pupa, adult). The fly looks different in each stage, as opposed to an insect which undergoes incomplete metamorphosis (three stages of egg, nymph, adult, in which the nymph is a miniature version of the adult).
is a fly comeplete or incomplete\
incomplete
a fly and fish
Aphid,buter fly,cockroaches,mosquito,dragon fly,frog grasshoppers,fly,incects
A fly undergoes complete metamorphosis, starting as an egg laid by an adult female fly. The egg hatches into a larva (maggot) which feeds, grows, and molts before transforming into a pupa. Inside the pupa, the fly undergoes metamorphosis and emerges as an adult fly.
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.
During metamorphosis, a maggot transforms into a fly through complete metamorphosis. The maggot will pupate, forming a hard casing around itself before developing into an adult fly. The fly will then emerge from the pupa casing and begin its adult life.
Complete: egg, larva, pupa, adult. Lepidoptera: egg, catepillar, chrysalis, butterfly/moth. Diptera: egg, maggot, pupa, fly/mosquito. Coleoptera: egg, grub, pupa, beetle. The main characteristic is that the larva looks very different from the adult, hence 'comlete' metamorphosis. Incomplete: egg, nymph, adult. Ephemeroptera: egg, naiad, mayfly. Odonata: egg, naiad, dragon/damselfly. Hemiptera: egg, nymph, aphid/cicada/true bug. If the larva is aquatic it's called a naiad, otherwise simply nymph. They look like smaller, wingless versions of their adult forms. They just molt until their wings are fully grown.
A fly goes through four stages of development: egg, larva (maggot), pupa (resting stage), and adult. This process is known as complete metamorphosis. The adult fly lays eggs, which hatch into larvae that feed and grow before undergoing pupation and emerging as adults.