
A larva (Latin; plural larvae) is a young (juvenile) form of animal with indirect development, going through or undergoing metamorphosis (for example, insects, amphibians, or cnidarians).
The larva can look completely different from the adult form, for example, a caterpillar differs from a butterfly. Larvae often have special (larval) organs which do not occur in the adult form. The larvae of some species can become pubescent and not further develop into the adult form (for example, in some newts). This is a type of neoteny.
It is a misunderstanding that the larval form always reflects the group's evolutionary history. It could be the case, but often the larval stage has evolved secondarily, as in insects. In these cases the larval form might differ more from the group's common origin than the adult form.
The early life stages of most fish species are considerably different from juveniles and adults of their species and are called larvae.
Names of various kinds of larvae:
| Animal | Name of larva |
|---|---|
| Hydrozoa | planula |
| Many crustaceans | nauplius |
| Decapoda | zoea |
| Mayflies, Grasshoppers, True Bugs, etc. | nymph |
| Dragonflies, Damselflies | naiad, nymph |
| Butterflies and moths | caterpillar |
| Beetles, Bees, Wasps | grub |
| Flies | maggot |
| Mosquitos | wriggler |
| Certain molluscs, annelids | trochophore |
| Certain molluscs | veliger |
| Freshwater mussels | glochidium |
| Lamprey | ammocoete |
| Fish (generally) | larva |
| Eels | leptocephalus |
| Amphibians | tadpole, polliwog |
| Echinoderms | Bipinnaria |
| This developmental biology article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
Why are we here?
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
This page is cache of Wikipedia. History