I'm not certain that this is always the case, but I heard that most caterpillars will go into a comatose state, as their body liquidates. They release a bunch of chemicals into the liquid caterpillar mixture which direct the reassembly process that ultimately results in a butterfly or moth.
The pupa is the stage of metamorphosis during which a caterpillar transforms into a butterfly.
The larva eats, but the pupa can't
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.
It is pupa stage .
During the pupa stage of development, an insect undergoes metamorphosis and does not actively breathe. Instead, gas exchange occurs through small openings in the outer casing of the pupa, allowing oxygen to enter and carbon dioxide to exit. This process is sufficient to meet the minimal oxygen needs of the pupa until it emerges as an adult insect.
A pupa is the life stage of certain insects, such as butterflies and beetles, during which the insect undergoes metamorphosis and develops into its adult form. The insect typically remains immobile within the pupal casing while this transformation takes place.
The next stage after the pupa is the adult...... because when insects are born they are called magets.......then pupa.......then adult it is the cycle of insect life.
1.Egg stage- 2.Larva stage- 3.Pupa stage- 4.Adult stage-
the larva stage stores up alot of energyfrom the food it feeds on and uses the energy for the pupa stage during which it does not feed.
Glycolysis occurs in the cytoplasm during the first stage of respiration.
yes
Bees go through four stages of development: # The queen lays an egg # The egg hatches into a larva # The larva grows then spins a cocoon and turns into a pupa # The full-sized adult bee emerges from the pupa. As you see, growth occurs mainly during the larval stage.