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Saturday, October 11, 2008

Metamorphosis (biology)

Metamorphosis in biology is physical development of the individual after birth or hatching involving significant change in form as well as growth and differentiation. It usually accompanies a change of habitat or of habits but may occur without such change. It was once thought that in those cases where the animal's habitat remains unchanged metamorphosis followed a series of forms representing evolutionary ancestors of the species in question (see ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny), but this is no longer thought to be the case.

The first type of metamorphosis is illustrated by many insects and by amphibians. Immature dragonflies are aquatic though the adults are flying insects, and frogs undergo a metamorphosis from an aquatic tadpole to an air-breathing and partially terrestrial adult form. Change of habits is illustrated by the transformation of the free-swimming young of many aquatic invertebrates into sessile adults, and the development of butterflies and moths from caterpillars with chewing mouthparts into flying insects with sucking mouthparts.

The second type is illustrated by many crustacean species, whose young undergo significant physical metamorphosis without changing habits or habitat significantly.

The immature stages of a species that undergoes metamorphosis are designated by the term larva. In the complex metamorphosis of many insect species, however, only the first stage is called a larva and sometimes even that bears a different name; the distinction depends upon the nature of the metamorphosis.

Some insects hatch from the egg already having the general form of the adult, and the metamorphosis to adult form is usually marked mainly by the development of wings. This type of metamorphosis is called gradual or incomplete metamorphosis, and the young are called nymphs, or naiads when aquatic. Insects with complete metamorphosis, pass through a larval stage and then enter an inactive state known as a pupa, finally emerging as the adult form. A number of beetle species and Strepsiptera undergo hypermetamorphosis, with a sequence of different larval forms preceding pupation.

In metamorphosis, the insects are in their junvenile form longer than eggs.  But while some species are being adults longer, others are in the reverse situation. The time in the following table is not accumulative. Cicada, mayfly and cockroach have incomplete metamorphosis, and its young is called nymph and not larva.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Species Egg Larva/Nymph Pupa Adult
Bluebottle Fly 1 day 8 days 9 days 35 days
Ladybug 4 days 18 days 15 days 9 months
Large White Butterfly 14 days 1 month 6 months 2 months
Periodical Cicada 1 month 17 years no such stage 2 months
Mayfly 1 month 3 years 1 day
Cockroach 1 month 3 months 9 months



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