Spotted tussock moth caterpillar
Yellow big bird
a dog
They turn into monarch butterflies
The caterpillar you are referring to is called the Woolly Bear caterpillar.
The Jamba Ramba Caterpillar is a fuzzy yellow caterpillar with a black head and black tufts that look like spikes.
it is most likely to be a monarch or something very similar
The lifecycle of a fuzzy yellow caterpillar with black spikes typically involves four stages: egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa (chrysalis), and adult butterfly. The caterpillar hatches from an egg, grows and feeds on leaves, then forms a chrysalis where it undergoes metamorphosis before emerging as a butterfly.
The yellow bear caterpillar eventually turns into the Virginia tiger moth. The moth is not poisonous, however some people have allergic reactions to it's body bristles.
Yes, the black and orange fuzzy caterpillar you may be referring to is likely a Milkweed Tussock Moth caterpillar.
A moth is what a fuzzy, black and red-brown caterpillar may change into.Specifically, the woolly bear caterpillar is a fuzzy black and red-brown. It often is seen curled up on the ground and around plantings in fall. It changes into the Isabella tiger moth (Pyrrharctia isabella).
the fuzzy brown caterpillar goes through a metamorphosis in its cocoon of human flesh to become John Carpentar. In our century there has been only one hatching of John Carpentar, for the obvious reason that everyone knows when you see a big brown fuzzy you must kill it immediatley...
The black and yellow caterpillar with spikes is called a "cinnabar moth caterpillar."