funnily enough its an optical illusion and looks to the human eye like a squirrel
It doesn't look after its young, she lays her eggs then leaves then so she can go and make more eggs
other birds, such as ducks and geese.
Cluckys. They are monsters that look like chickens.
The eggs that a rolly polly lays are tiny and white. They usually keep the tiny eggs on their underside to keep them safe.
Change fights given duck found chef and when she lays her eggs
A Duck lays eggs, and a Goat is a mammal so that is theoretically impossible.
This makes them look like the head of a very large animal instead of a ... This memory will stay with the predator, who will avoid that type of .... It eats milkweed in its larval stage and lays eggs on the poisonous milkweed plant. ...
WE HAD 5 PAINTED LADY BUTTERFLY'S AND THEY LAYED BABY BLUE EGGS THEY ARE VERY TINY AND YOU WOULD HAVE TO LOOK FOR THEM, WHEN THEY ARE READY TO HATCH THEY SOMETIMES TURN A LIGHT BROWN OR ARE CLEAR.
WHAT IS A BUTTERFLY CLIP LOOK LIKE
No. Butterfies will eat fruit, but caterpillars will not. Cats eat the host plant that their eggs are laid on. Each type of butterfly has a different host plant. Monarchs lay their eggs on the Milkweed plant. The Red Admiral butterfly lays her eggs on Pellitory Weed, & False Nettle Weed. Swallowtails lay their eggs on Sweet Fennel, Alfalfa, & Clovers. I have many pics from my butterfly garden of butterflies & a few of Monarch cats. The facebook page is Flowers in Bloom. There are several pages with that name, so look for the profile pic with the gray butterfly, that's my page.
It depends on what kind of goldfish; normally, you just have to wait to see who lays the eggs to find out the sex of your fish.
The butterfly lays her eggs directly on the host plant of whatever that is for that kind , for example, the Monarch lay their eggs on the Milkweed plant. The Latin name is Asclepias. The eggs turn into caterlillars (cats). Since they are laid directly on the leaf of the host plant, the cats stay on that plant & eat the leaves. I hope this answers your question. Look on my facebook page, Flowers in Bloom to see the baby Monarch cats I had in my butterfly garden this summer. There are several sites with that name, so look for the icon (profile pic) with the gray butterfly, that's my page.