Cockroaches and grasshoppers are both insects, but they belong to different orders. Cockroaches are part of the order Blattodea, while grasshoppers are part of the order Orthoptera. One key physical difference is that grasshoppers have long hind legs built for jumping, while cockroaches have shorter legs adapted for scurrying. Additionally, grasshoppers are herbivores, feeding on plants, while cockroaches are omnivores and will eat a wider variety of food sources.
A caterpillar is the larva (baby) of a moth or butterfly, order Lepidoptera. A grasshopper belongs to the order Orthoptera, and their nymphs (babies) look just like the adults, only smaller and wingless, as they have incomplete metamorphosis. Caterpillars have complete metamorphosis, hence the butterfly or moth looking completely different.
well the legs of the cockroaches are small compared to the grasshoppers and grasshoppers have strong legs compared to cockroach.
The difference between a locust and a katydid is a locust is short horned grasshopper. A katydid is a long horned grasshopper, or what is known as just a grasshopper.
cockroaches lay their eggs in eggcases or eggpouches while grasshoppers lay their eggs in the soil.
if it is flying ,it is a mature cockroach if it not flying it may be a mature cockroaches or a nymph (immature)
A baby cockroach looks like a cockroach but smaller. a baby butterfly is a caterpillar.
Sounds to me like it'd be the length of their horns that is the difference.
They make sounds and they can collorful
the animal is......................................grasshopper.
There is no difference. A water bug is a type of cockroach. It is different from the more common American Cockroach, which is why some people claim it is not a roach.
The lifestyle of a cockroach starts as an egg. The egg goes through the nymph cycle approximately eight times, before becoming an adult. The lifestyle of a grasshopper is egg to nymph to adult.
A caterpillar has more than six legs while a cockroach nymph has six legs
earth worm, grasshopper cockroach,snail and molluscians