How to use in-sentence of “larvae”:
– Queen-destined larvae show faster growth rates in various bodily compartments than worker-destined larvae.
– Although the adults are palatable, the larvae are not.
– Grapevines are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species.
– Also the free-swimming planula larvae of cnidarians exhibit bilateral symmetry.
– Both larvae and adults are active predators.
– Development is usually direct, though there are larvae in some species.
– The larvae feed on Scots pine, Swiss pine, Siberian pine and Norway spruce.

Example sentences of “larvae”:
– The snakefly is found on every continent except Australia and may be beneficial to humans because it destroys the larvae and pupae of other insects.
– The larvae of some moths make silk, which people use to make clothing.
– However, most invertebrate species are not raised by parents at all, with larvae developing amongst the plankton.
– One species, the red-throated caracara, eats insects and the larvae of bees and wasps.
– Most “Microdon” larvae can only live in the colony of one kind of ant.Duffield R.M.
– A long-standing theory is that in transformed larvae of Sea squirtsea-squirts lies the origin of vertebrates.
– Its larvae feed on honeysuckle.
– Some larvae metamorphose quickly.
– After hatching the larvae look like tiny maggots.
– A study of some ant larvae with a consideration of the origin and meaning of social habits among insects.
– The golden everlasting serves as food for different kinds of larvae of butterflies, moths and skippers.
– They hatch as larvae from eggs in the water.
– After the larvae of “Glyptapanteles” emerge, the caterpillar takes up position near the cocoons of the pupae, arches its back, and ceases to move or feed.
– Its larvae develop in stages called “instars”.
– Pipevine Swallowtail butterflyswallowtail butterflies lay their eggs on pipevine, and the larvae dine on the plant but are not affected by the toxin, which then offers the adult butterfly protection against predators.
– Classification of the order Decapoda depends on the structure of the gills and legs, and the way in which the larvae develop.
- The snakefly is found on every continent except Australia and may be beneficial to humans because it destroys the larvae and pupae of other insects.
- The larvae of some moths make silk, which people use to make clothing.
- However, most invertebrate species are not raised by parents at all, with larvae developing amongst the plankton.
More in-sentence examples of “larvae”:
– It is not clear how they get there, but probably the final host eats the interim host with the larvae inside them.
– Its larvae eat cacti in the genus “Opuntia”, feeding on plant moisture and nutrients.
– Inside the gall, larvae develop.
– The nauplius larvae are less than 0.4mm in length when they first hatch.
– The larvae of “Microdon” flies look strange.
– They thought it would eat mosquito larvae so there would be fewer mosquitoes.
– Afterwards, newt larvae start a predatory lifestyle, while tadpoles mostly scrape food off surfaces with their horny tooth ridges.
– Also, firefly larvae flash their lights to warn predators that they are not a tasty meal.
– The “Parnassius” butterfly larvae make a flimsy cocoon for pupation and they pupate near the ground surface between debris.
– In a few beetles, the larvae change their shape after some time.
– The adults of many species feed mainly on nectar and pollen, while the larvae eat a wide range of foods.
– The larvae mainly attack bees.
– Echinoderm larvae are ciliated free-swimming organisms that have a bilaterally symmetry rather like embryonic chordates.
– Most amphibian larvae and some fully aquatic adult amphibians have systems which work a bit like the lateral line.
– The asexual stage is termed a “nematogen”; it produces “vermiform” larvae in the axial cell.
– Ladybeetle larvae are also voracious eaters of greenfly.
– In considering microsize prey, one should see the issue from the perspective of their main predator, which is birds taking larvae to feed their chicks.
– Larvae of the subfamily Mantispinae seek out female spiders or their egg sacs which they then enter; the scarab-like larvae then feed on the spider eggs, draining egg contents through a piercing/sucking tube.
– The larvae move around near the surface of the water, breathing through air tubes that stick out of the water.
– Several moths in the family Tineidae have larvae which eat clothes and blankets made from natural fibres, such as wool or silk.Scott, Thomas.
– Poplars and aspens are important food plants for the larvae of a large number of Lepidoptera species.
– Planktonic larvae develop, grow into adults and eventually sink to the bottom of the water.
– In time, the developing larvae leave the sponge body and swim until they find a suitable location and surface on which to attach, grow, and develop.
– When the eggs hatch, the larvae will eat the dung that their mother supplied for them.
– The larvae of a number of species bore into wood.
– Usually their larvae are aquatic, but there are many exceptions to this.
– The larvae live in brood balls made with dung prepared by their parents.
– The larvae are parasiteparasitic on arthropods: beetles, cockroaches, grasshoppers and crickets.
– The female will produce over 100,000 eggs in a single spawning, and the resulting larvae are quite tiny.
– With each molt, the larvae grow hooked hairs which allow them to be carried in groups.
– Some of the species are used by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species.
– There are variations in the details: sometimes a little complex of heterozooids produce larvae in a cooperative effort.
– A few Skipper butterfly larvae also make crude cocoons in which they pupate, exposing the pupa a bit.
– Historically, insects have been the most significant herbivores, especially the larvae of insects.
– The active and carnivorous larvae live beneath loose tree bark.
– The leaf falls, but the larvae may come out only the next spring.
– The larvae eat different food from the adults, and disperse.
– On dispersal and planktonic larvae of benthic invertebrates: an eclectic overview and summary of problems.
– It will eat flies, dragonflies, beetles, true bugs, mites, bees, wasps, ants, insect larvae and millipedes.
– Other beetle larvae are short and very thick and are called grubs.
– The barnacles reproduce sexually, and produce little nauplius larvae which disperse in the plankton.
– The larvae chew through this layer and emerge as small bees.
– The larvae of a number of Lepidoptera species also feed on the plant.
– Some beetle larvae are predators, which means they hunt for other insects to eat.
– Frogs, toads, and newts all hatch from the egg as larvae with external gills.
– They eat insects, larvae or worms.
– Their larvae are glowworms.
– When these hatch, the larvae crawl into the toad’s nostrils and eat its flesh.
- It is not clear how they get there, but probably the final host eats the interim host with the larvae inside them.
- Its larvae eat cacti in the genus "Opuntia", feeding on plant moisture and nutrients.
- Inside the gall, larvae develop.
