Monarch butterflyy
There are many moths with yellow caterpillars and many butterflies with yellow caterpillars as well. If it is very fuzzy, it's almost definitely a moth larva. If it is smooth or covered with spikes it could be a butterfly or a moth...
it is most likely to be a monarch or something very similar
no
It will become a butterfly. It will become a moth.
Northern minnesota caterpillars can vary. Some are fuzzy, black and yellow as a bee. Some can look alll green as grass.
The lifecycle of a yellow fuzzy caterpillar with black spikes begins with the egg stage, where the female butterfly lays eggs on a plant. The eggs hatch into caterpillars, which feed on leaves and grow in size. As they grow, they molt their skin several times. Eventually, the caterpillar forms a chrysalis or pupa, where it undergoes metamorphosis and transforms into a butterfly. The butterfly emerges from the chrysalis and begins its adult life, seeking out nectar and mating to start the cycle again.
I think you're thinking of the Monarch Butterfly. Either way, no. The Monarch caterpillar is not fuzzy. The fuzzy orange and black caterpillars are likely from the Isabella Tiger Moth. Google both those species and you should get pictures, see if we're talking about the same thing.
nope you can harm them much more then they can harm you.
Yes, either a Butterfly or a Moth.
a black and brown fuzzy caterpillar eats....every thing that's a plant!
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.
Fuzzy caterpillars turn into moths.