The larvae emerge as caterpillars.
Bees do not give live birth. The queen lays eggs that hatch into larvae which feed and grow. When fully grown the larvae pupate, and adult bees emerge from the pupae.
The life cycle of a Christmas beetle starts out as a larvae that lives underground. The larvae will then move to the surface in late winter or early spring. Once the adults emerge, they will feed and mate at nearby plants. The female will soon lay eggs and the adult Christmas beetles will leave the entire summer.
When a wasp egg hatches, larvae emerge, and will eventually grow into adult wasps. A queen will lay between 5,000 and 10,000 eggs per year.
Eggs, which hatch into Larvae, which Pupate and emerge as adult bees much the same as other holometabolic insects (those which perform complete metamorphosis).
The "grubs" are bee larvae. Like all insects, the larvae grow, then enter the pupa stage to metamophose into the adult form. While pupating, they need to be protected, kept warm and precented from dehydrating. Sealing the pupas into the honey cells achieves this. Once ready, the adult bees chew the cell caps open and emerge.
from larvae to adult
Adult moths live for up to a week, without feeding, because they have reduced mouth parts. Larvae from hatching to pupae live for 5-6 weeks. It takes them 2 weeks to turn into adult in summer, but if the silk cocoon is formed in fall, then it will overwinter. The adult will emerge in spring.
adults can hunt insects and scavenge food left by animals and humans. and larvae can only eat the nectar that the adult wasps bring to the larvae or they bring insect blood to let the larvae eat
Adult is the answer
5days
Larvae are the hatched form of an amphibian that is different from the adult. A larva of an amphibian may be free swimming (e.g. tadpoles) before the metamorphosis to an adult (e.g. a frog).
Not really; even in arthopods seemingly having no legs, they're conceiled. A few examples are water fleas and barnacles (legs inside the carapace, used for filtering food from water), and many larvae (structures are present and will emerge in the adult).