Yes. It is advised not to transfer them while in bloom though. You can also store them over the winter indoors. See the related link for more information on daffodils.
Yes, you can transplant daffodils in the spring.
In the summer, the daffodil is dormant. The bulb is hidden beneath the soil, not to appear again until late winter. Therefore there are no life stages for a daffodil in the summer.
Yes, daffodils can be successfully transplanted by carefully digging up the bulbs in the fall after the foliage has died back and replanting them in a new location with well-draining soil and adequate sunlight.
Summer
You can transplant iris in late summer.
The general rule's to transplant in fall whenever and wherever possible. For the first 1-1/2 - 2 years are the most challenging for a transplant. The idea's to have more time - fall, winter, spring - to get established before the excesses of summer. It's generally thought to be more stressful for a tree to be transplanted in spring. For the transplant has hardly any time to settle in before summer extremes.
Yes we have daffodils
"Daffodils" is the plural of "daffodil."
Yes. In fact, they can actually choke out and kill other Daffodils if they become too numerously dense in one small location. They also return each year, usually early spring up until the mid summer.
daffodils are not found in India.
No, daffodils are not carnivorous. :P
Daffodils have been around many many centuries. In fact daffodils are older than humans. Daffodils evolved sometime in the Oligocene period or Miocene period.