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User avatar #15 - xtremeskill (01/04/2012) [-]
I don't think there's such thing as butterfly eggs.
User avatar #18 to #15 - colector (01/04/2012) [-]
And how do you think, my good ser they reproduce, hmm ?
User avatar #19 to #18 - xtremeskill (01/04/2012) [-]
Caterpillars.
#49 to #19 - pinkyziolk (01/04/2012) [-]
we learned about the life cycle of a butterfly in first grade bro.....unless you haven't attended it yet id recomend that you gtfo
#34 to #19 - buckwild (01/04/2012) [-]
i don['t want to live on this planet anymore
User avatar #20 to #19 - colector (01/04/2012) [-]
I hope you are joking ... really
User avatar #23 to #20 - xtremeskill (01/04/2012) [-]
Butterflies lay caterpillar eggs, since that's the rule in all lepidopterans.
User avatar #26 to #23 - colector (01/04/2012) [-]
You said it yourself lol ... butterflies lay eggs - > those eggs become the larvae (caterpillar) and then the cocoon and into adult butterfly. So it is correct to call them butterfly eggs, since its the butterfly that lays them, no ?
#28 to #26 - hemming (01/04/2012) [-]
What he meant is that they lay CATERPILLAR EGGS not BUTTERFLY EGGS. :)
User avatar #30 to #28 - colector (01/04/2012) [-]
Now we are talking semantics... in the end it all sums up to the point of view any one of us decides to take on the matter. You can choose to address it by the species that laid it or by the one hatching from it. My point being that calling them "butterfly" eggs is equally legit.
User avatar #27 to #26 - xtremeskill (01/04/2012) [-]
But that's not what the actual egg is called, if the egg was in a butterfly then that would be the case but its not... its on a rasberry.
User avatar #35 to #27 - buckwild (01/04/2012) [-]
ok i get it. so its a rasberry egg. seems legit
User avatar #21 to #20 - colector (01/04/2012) [-]
Or maybe you just skipped some biology classes in highschool... who knows :)
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