Hemimetabolous insects have a gradual change from larva to adult and the larva resembles the adult it will become. Holometabgolous insects have a pupal instar and the larva does not resemble the adult.
These insects either have hemimetabolous development, and undergo an incomplete or partial metamorphosis, or holometabolous development, which undergo a complete metamorphosis, including a pupal or resting stage between the larval and adult forms. In hemimetabolous insects, immature stages are called nymphs.
Hemimetabolous
Grasshoppers do not go through a pupal stage. Insects fall into two major groups, holometabolous (complete metamorphosis: pupal stage) and hemimetabolous (incomplete metamorphosis: no pupal stage). Grasshoppers are hemimetabolous, like crickets, mayflies, stinkbugs, etc., and insects that undergoe incomplete metamorphosis do not have a pupal stage. Holometabolous insects such as flies, butterflies, beetles, wasps, etc. do undergoe complete metamorphosis and they all have a pupal stage.
All insects are invertebrates. Common examples include beetles, flies, bees, wants, wasps, butterflies, moths, and grasshoppers.
lady bug and grasshopper
arthropods
Mice and Insects
examples are the monarch butterfly etc.
Ants and flies are examples of insects. Both belong to the Kingdom:Animalia, Phylum:Arthropoda and Class:Insecta.
Some examples of solitary insects include praying mantises, beetles, and certain species of bees such as digger bees and sweat bees. These insects typically live and forage alone rather than in social groups or colonies.
Arachnids - they are part of the phylum Arthropoda, the class Arachnida and the subclass Acari (or Acarina). They have 4 pairs of legs (larval stages have 3 pairs) and have a hemimetabolous lifecycle (meaning the larvae and nymph stages look the same as the adult but smaller).