The pupa provides food for itself. it stores it in its immune system!
honey bees eat honey
no they dont eat
blood
they don't eat anything
The larva eats, but the pupa can't
ladybirds (ladybugs) pupa don't eat anything. they just fall asleep for a few days and then they turn into a adult.
Yes
Pupas do not eat. The pupa is a caterpillar, in a state of dormancy, completely encased in a cocoon. During this stage they do not eat, drink, or move at all. They grow wings, legs, and other parts to become an adult butterfly. Because they can't eat in their pupa stage, caterpillars eat massive amounts of food to have plenty of stored energy before they become encased in their cocoon.
The honeybee goes through four stages of development:# The egg, laid by the queen in a brood cell. # This hatches into a larva, which is fed by the nurse bees. # The larva then becomes a pupa, and the worker bees cap the cell with wax. # Finally, the adult bee breaks through the cap and emerges from the cell.
=- dwarf honeybee==- giant honeybee==- Cavity-nesting honey bees=
=- dwarf honeybee==- giant honeybee==- Cavity-nesting honey bees=
Yes, they move up and down the water column to eat and avoid danger.