English to Gujarati Dictionary metamorphose

metamorphose

પરિવર્તન
definition
verb
feed the larvae to your fish before they metamorphose into adults
(of an insect or amphibian) undergo metamorphosis, especially into the adult form.
example
The megalopas return in large swarms to the nearshore waters and estuaries in the spring, where they 'metamorphose' into first instar juvenile crabs.
The newly hatched larvae grow for approximately two months before they begin to 'metamorphose' into the adult form.
Trilling frog tadpoles can 'metamorphose' within 17 days, pumping the same hormone through their systems that induces premature births in humans.
It becomes a matter of concern when these things get repeated once too often and responsible persons 'metamorphose' into gurus telling people, especially women, how to live their lives.
Embryonic coelomic structures have specific fates as the bilaterally symmetrical larvae 'metamorphose' into radially symmetric adults.
Three of 11 pools surveyed dried before any tadpoles could 'metamorphose' .
Ordinarily, between 6 and 11 percent of leopard frog tadpoles survive and 'metamorphose' into adults.
These larvae will also 'metamorphose' into adults sooner than their long-armed brethren and thus are vulnerable to planktonic predators for a shorter period of time.
Like a creature of nature who can quickly adapt to her surroundings, I hibernate, 'metamorphose' , undergo catharsis and finally become a butterfly.
Fertilized eggs develop into crawling planula larvae which settle on hermit crab-occupied shells, and subsequently 'metamorphose' into primary polyps.
Also see fishlike tadpoles that will later 'metamorphose' into American bullfrogs, sprouting legs and losing their tails.
However ‘temporary’ these sanctions are supposed to be, the history of such measures is that they tend to 'metamorphose' into something far more long-lasting.
feed the larvae to your fish before they 'metamorphose' into adults
I should say that there are some fine performances in the film as well, particularly from Gary Sinise who seems to be able to 'metamorphose' into whatever character he is playing.
Their most talented and experienced analysts are likely to 'metamorphose' into bankers, who earn roughly twice what they do, leaving their less savvy colleagues to serve retail clients.
He'd always bring a jar of the stuff in and we'd have lessons where we'd document the life of the frog by watching the frog spawn hatch and 'metamorphose' from tadpoles to frogs.
At the end of the larval stage, the animals drop down to the seafloor and 'metamorphose' into adults.
The fungus seems to do no harm until the tadpoles start to 'metamorphose' and develop the keratin-rich skin of the adult stage.
Larvae 'metamorphose' spontaneously, regardless of where they are.
The exercise is very popular with most students, and some once infected with the publication bug 'metamorphose' into helpless, chronic letter writers.
Then, after thirteen or seventeen years (depending on the species), the nymphs crawl to the surface and 'metamorphose' into red-eyed adults.
The net result of these four features of development is that larvae will 'metamorphose' at an earlier age if they encounter a decline in growth opportunity, providing that they have exceeded a critical threshold.
overnight, family houses 'metamorphose' into bed and breakfast as 7,000 visitors roll into town
feed the larvae to your fish before they 'metamorphose' into adults
Most amphibians hatch as aquatic, swimming larvae, then 'metamorphose' into terrestrial forms.
‘Marble’ is a general term for any kind of limestone or other carbonate rock that has been 'metamorphosed' .
Many polychaetes hatch into a particular type of planktonic larva, the trochophore, which later 'metamorphoses' into a juvenile annelid.
After a larva lands on the ocean floor, it 'metamorphoses' , and the adult sponge begins to grow.
This rock unit consists chiefly of Silurian shale and sandstone that have been 'metamorphosed' to high-grade schist and migmatite.
A larva 'metamorphoses' into a small polyp termed the scyphistoma.
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