Why does metamorphosis occur in some animals and not others? Evolutionary biologist and BBC Wildlife columnist JV Chamary explains the process of metamorphosis

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Published: Friday, 15 November 2024 at 15:40 PM


We first encounter metamorphosis through children’s books such as The Very Hungry Caterpillar, in which (spoiler alert!) the insatiable insect ends up turning into a beautiful butterfly.

This process – a spectacular transformation in an animal’s form or ‘morphology’ – produces dramatic differences between larvae and adults.

What animals go through metamorphosis?

Metamorphosis is characteristic of insects and amphibians, but it’s also found in specific groups. Flatfish are a clear case among vertebrates: a fish starts with two sides to its body – bilateral symmetry – but the right eye migrates to the left side and its dorsal fin becomes shorter as it transitions from a free-swimming larva to a ‘benthic’ or bottom-dwelling adult on the seafloor or river bed.

Similar phenomena occur in invertebrates. For example, adult echinoderms have a benthic lifestyle and radial symmetry – as seen in five-armed starfish – but their larvae are bilaterally symmetrical, free-swimming plankton.

Do insects go through metamorphosis?

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Insects have an exoskeleton, which constrains size and shape, and must shed their rigid, outermost layer (moulting) and form a new one to grow. Primitive groups such as silverfish are ‘ametabolous’, meaning they don’t transform and hatchlings are small versions of the wingless adults. More advanced insect groups, such as crickets and dragonflies, are ‘hemimetabolous’, meaning they undergo partial metamorphosis – the adults mature from juvenile nymphs that lack parts such as wings and genitals.