It is known as mimicry.
This would be an example of Batesien mimicry as opposed to Mullarian mimicry.
yes they kill more harmless insects than harmful ones.
No, Flower Mantises are not harmful to humans. They are unique insects that use camouflage to resemble flowers and are generally peaceful creatures that feed on other insects in their environment.
Yes, it is possible that many harmless insects such as beetles and flies resemble stinging yellow jackets. The yellow jacket-like sugar maple borer (Glycobius speciosus) may be considered among the more harmless of the harmful long-horned wood-boring beetles since its impact is more defective timber -- through larval galleries and twisted grain -- than dead wood. The yellow jacket hover fly (Milesia virginiensis) serves as a pollinator whose larval stages prey upon decaying animal and plant matter and upon aphids and thrips.
In hemimetabolic insects, the yound do not resemble the adults, and in apterygote insects, the young do resemble the adults.
NO
The big mosquito-looking bugs are called crane flies. They are not harmful to humans as they do not bite or sting. They are often mistaken for mosquitoes due to their similar appearance, but they are harmless insects that do not pose any threat.
they have no particular name,they are called non harmful insects
A list of harmless flying insects includes flies, butter flies, grass hoppers, moths, and many others.
The most common predator to harm a butterfly is the bird. Birds of all species enjoy dining on these colorful insects.
most insects are harmless except for wasps bees spiders(just to name a few)
The insects that resemble giant mosquitoes are called crane flies. They are often mistaken for mosquitoes due to their similar appearance, but they do not bite or feed on blood like mosquitoes do.