They are mostly herbivores but some are decomposers.
Mud dauber wasp only has one predator and that is the bird.
An immature insect is called a larva or nymph depending on the insect species. Larvae are the early stage of insects with incomplete metamorphosis, while nymphs are the young stages of insects that undergo gradual metamorphosis. Both larva and nymphs undergo developmental changes before reaching adult maturity.
Bees collect pollen to feed their young larvae and for their own nutrition. Pollen is a rich source of proteins, vitamins, and minerals that are essential for the growth and development of bee colonies.
actually both... most of them are...and do eat decaying and rotten insects and animals. some ants raid their surroundings looking for both living and dead animals. the farmer ants gather leaves but they do not eat it. they culture a certain fungi back in their house.
Both amphibian metamorphosis and insect metamorphosis are alike because one animal or insect becomes an entirely new animal or insect. They are different in the process, however. The frog actually mutates from a tiny tadpole to an adult frog. The caterpillar wraps itself in a cocoon where the mutation is not visible.
Housefly, butterfly, moth, mosquito
No, lightning bugs, or fireflies, do not come from worms. They are actually beetles belonging to the family Lampyridae. The larvae of fireflies, often called "glowworms," are similar to worms in appearance but are distinct insects that eventually mature into adult fireflies. Both the larvae and adults are known for their bioluminescence.
No, dragonflies do not eat leaves. Dragonflies, which are of the order of insects called Odonata, are strictly predatorial. They feed on other insects in both their nymphal (aquatic) stage and their adult stage, and have even been known to consume small minnows and crawfish in their nymphal stage.
both in larva stage
Most lady beetles (known as ladybirds in UK) are beneficial as both adults and larvae, feeding primarily on aphids. They also feed on mites, small insects, and insect eggs. aphidsAnswerThe will eat mostly the leaves of a oak tree and cedar.
Dead remains of insects. Both adults and larvae are considered beneficial since they feed on larvae of many harmful insects also.
I believe that it would be complete. Egg, Larvae, Pupae, Adult
A butterfly larva is called a caterpillar; moth larvae are called the same thing. Both insects undergo complete metamorphosis when the caterpillars enter their pupal stages, emerging in their adult forms.
Mud dauber wasp only has one predator and that is the bird.
No, cicadas are not carnivorous. Both the larvae (nymphs) and adults feed on plant sap.
Nymphs are a juvenile form of insects that undergo hemimetabolous, or gradual metamorphosis. Nymphs are like "mini-adults" and resemble their adult form. Many winged insects have aquatic nymph young with wing buds. The nymph undergoes successive instars (periods of growth) and molts. Winged insects do not have fully developed wings until after the final molt. Hemimetabolous insects include grasshoppers, cicadas, and mantids which have terrestrial young; and mayflies, stoneflies, and dragonflies which have aquatic young.Larvae are a juvenile form of insects that undergo holometabolous, or complete metamorphosis. The wormlike larvae do not resemble their adult form. After several instars, larva enter a transitional stage called a pupa. Pupae are usually enclosed in a case, and are inactive and nonfeeding. During the final molt, the adult emerges from the pupa. Larvae are commonly known as caterpillars, maggots, bagworms, fuzzy worms, and grubs.
how The life cycles of a mollusk and an insect are alike because the larvae both look like worms. Some of them are worms, but the larva of the insect grows to look like a regular adult later on in life. There are other similarities that I cannot state.