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After hatching, the larvae live among the plankton until they develop a swim bladder and transform into adults.
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After and hatching
After hatching, the hen fiercely guards the chicks, and will brood them when necessary to keep them warm, at first often returning to the nest at night.
After hatching, the free-swimming embryo spends about a week absorbing the relatively small amount of yolk.
After hatching, the incubating adult remains with the chick for a number of days, a period known as the guard phase.
After hatching, the larval are very small and are transparent except for the eyes, yolk sac, and a few colors across the body.
After hatching the chick is brooded by a parent until it is large enough to thermoregulate efficiently, and in some cases defend itself from predation.
After hatching, chicks leave the nest with their mother within 24 hours ; they are already able to dive and feed themselves, although they remain with their mother for another five weeks.
After the last egg has been laid, both parents incubate for about 19 – 21 days until hatching, and feed the young birds.
After hatching, they are led away from the nest and may move to habitats such as sewage farms, lake edges, marshes and mudflats.
After hatching, the female cares for and feeds the chicks for the first 8 – 14 days of life, and also during bad weather after that.
After hatching both parents feed the young, which fledge 10 to 12 days later and are dependent on parental care for about another month.
After hatching, the caterpillars tend to wander around before finally settling on eating the particular plant they are on.
After hatching, the parasite larva kills the host larva, unless the female parasite has already done so, and then consumes the provisions.
After hatching, young remained in the family group and were fed by the adults for three months, by which time they appeared adult.
After hatching, the young are brooded for 16 to 23 days by the female, while the male defends the territory and catches food.
After and larvae
After settling, all larvae undergo a radical metamorphosis that destroys and rebuilds almost all the internal tissues.
After dragging the cockroach to a burrow, the wasp deposits an egg into its carcass, burying it for the growing larvae to feed off until it emerges in 6 weeks, leaving nothing but a hard outer cockroach shell.
After this they start to eat freshwater plankton, and later insect larvae, molluscs and similar food ( unlike frog tadpoles, newts are carnivorous throughout their life ).
After humans ingest the cysts from infected undercooked meat, pepsin and hydrochloric acid help free the larvae in the cysts in the stomach.
After the emergence of the first or second group of workers, workers take over the task of foraging and the queen spends most of her time laying eggs and caring for larvae.
After about four days they become D-stage larvae, the stage at which they first develop hinged, D-shaped valves.
After the eggs hatch and the early-stage larvae develop into leptocephali, the young eels move toward North America where they metamorphose into glass eels and enter freshwater systems where they grow as yellow eels until they begin to mature.
After eggs hatch from the 30 to 50 brood cells, the queen feeds the young larvae for about 18 to 20 days.
After that, the workers in the colony will take over caring for the larvae, feeding them with chewed up food, meat or fruit.
After 4 – 15 days, the eggs hatch into reddish-brown larvae with humped backs and two rows of dark brown spots on either side.
After infective eggs are swallowed ( 4 ), the larvae hatch ( 5 ), invade the intestinal mucosa, and are carried via the portal, then systemic circulation and / or lymphatics to the lungs.
After three days, the drone and worker larvae are no longer fed with royal jelly, but queen larvae continue to be fed this special substance throughout their development.
After the first larvae hatch, the foundress feeds them via progressive provisioning, bringing softened caterpillar flesh to the larvae multiple times throughout their development ( as opposed to the one-time provisioning seen in some other hymenopteran groups ).
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