No larval stage is the maggot (as in housefly) then they pupate and the adult emerges after metamorphosis. Those insects where the nymphs adults look like adults have only a 3-stage cycle egg, nymph, adult, with no larval or pupal stage.
Hemimetabolous insects have a gradual change from larva to adult and the larva resembles the adult it will become. Holometabgolous insects have a pupal instar and the larva does not resemble the adult.
larva stage
1.Egg stage- 2.Larva stage- 3.Pupa stage- 4.Adult stage-
No larval stage is the maggot (as in housefly) then they pupate and the adult emerges after metamorphosis. Those insects where the nymphs adults look like adults have only a 3-stage cycle egg, nymph, adult, with no larval or pupal stage.
Axolotols do not really skip the larva stage. But when they hatch, they are a larva and they do not metamorphose into an adult. They stay that phase all their life.
both in larva stage
Pupa
I think it is metamorphosis
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.
The larva stage comes before the pupa stage in insect development. Larvae are typically the immature stage of an insect that hatches from an egg, while pupae are the stage that follows and undergoes transformation before emerging as an adult insect.
Typically, a pupa stage comes after a larval stage in many insect species. During the pupa stage, the insect undergoes metamorphosis and transforms into its adult form.
Yes, but only through ocean current.