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::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage, it starts looking for mates
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, it starts looking for mates
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage, it starts looking for mates
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage, it starts looking for mates
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, it starts looking for mates
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, it starts looking for mates
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage, it starts looking for mates
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, it starts looking for mates
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage, it starts looking for mates
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage, it starts looking for mates
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage,it starts growing long legs
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it starts growing long legs
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage,it starts growing long legs
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it starts growing long legs
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it starts growing long legs
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it starts growing long legs
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it starts growing long legs
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it starts growing long legs
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it starts growing long legs
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it starts growing long legs
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it lives under the soil
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it lives under the soil
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it rests inside a thin soil case
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage,it lives underground
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it lives underground
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it lives underground
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the larvae stage,it lives underground
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage,it lives underground
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it lives underground
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it lives underground
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage,it lives underground
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage,it lives underground
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage,it lives underground
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage,it lives underground
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage,it lives underground
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage, it looks like a squishy worm with no eyes
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off.
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off.
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupa stage, they are hiding in their cases.
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off.
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, they are hiding in their cases.
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, they are hiding in their cases.
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the pupae stage, they are hiding in their cases.
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, they are hiding in their cases.
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage, they are hiding in their cases.
entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the egg stage, they are hiding in their cases.
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the fully grown stage, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off.
not_entailment
indicator
::stage Egg:: When it's time for a mother African goliath beetle to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the rich dirt of the rainforest. But unlike your parents, the mother African goliath beetle doesn't stick around to take care of the eggs. It can take the eggs up to two weeks to hatch underground. At this point, wiggly larvae start to appear. ::stage Larvae:: African goliath beetle larvae (pronounced lar-VEE) look like fat, squishy worms with no eyes. But the larva don't need to see at this point because they will live underground in the dark for several months. The larvae eat and grow, getting bigger and bigger. The larva are at their heaviest during this stage and can weigh about one quarter of a pound, which is around the same as twenty quarters! And African goliath beetle larvae can grow to be around five inches long, too - that's a little longer than a soda can. ::stage Pupae:: After the larvae have finished growing, they dive deeper underground and use the soil and their spit to make a thin case, like a butterfly makes a cocoon. The larva become pupae (pronounced PEW-pee) and will rest inside their case for several months as their bodies change and grow long legs, wings and a hard outer shell called an exoskeleton. Once the rainy season starts and enough water drips through the soil to reach the now fully grown African goliath beetles, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off. ::stage Adult:: Once they pop out of the ground and take off, adult African goliath beetles look for mates. After a mother beetle has found a partner and is ready to lay her eggs, she digs a hole in the ground and the whole life cycle starts all over again.
In the adult stage, they crawl out of their cases in the soil and fly off.
entailment
indicator

Dataset Card for "lifecycle-entailment"

https://github.com/NSanjay/EntailmentDataset

@article{article,
author = {Mitra, Arindam and Clark, Peter and Tafjord, Oyvind and Baral, Chitta},
year = {2019},
month = {07},
pages = {3003-3010},
title = {Declarative Question Answering over Knowledge Bases Containing Natural Language Text with Answer Set Programming},
volume = {33},
journal = {Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence},
doi = {10.1609/aaai.v33i01.33013003}
}
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Models trained or fine-tuned on tasksource/lifecycle-entailment