Most reptiles lay amniotic eggs covered with leathery or calcareous shells. An amnion, chorion and allantois are present during embryonic life. There are no larval stages of development. Viviparity and ovoviviparity have only evolved in Squamates, and a substantial fraction of the species utilize this mode of reproduction, including all boas and most vipers. The degree of viviparity varies: some species simply retain the eggs until just before hatching, others provide maternal nourishment to supplement the yolk, while still others lack any yolk and provide all nutrients via a placenta.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reptile#Reproductive
Not directly, no. An egg hatches into a caterpillar, and the caterpillar eats and grows then spins a cocoon and pupates. From the pupa the butterfly emerges.
Butterfly eggs are not amniotic. The butterfly egg has a coating of wax that will prevent the egg from drying out.
yes they are...they lay eggs
what is butterfly
butterfly
A fish is oviparous as it is an egg layer.
THE ANSWER IS IDKKKKKK
of the shape of the butterflies
Butterflies do not have bones.
I don't think so, butterflies are insect which means they have an exoskeleton, and exoskeleton doesn't have pores.
Butterflies lay eggs so they are oviparous
Octopus is a oviparous
Oviparous, because the larvae are hatched after the eggs are laid.
Geese lay eggs, so are oviparous.
oviparous
oviparous
oviparous
Flukes ARE oviparous
Oviparous animals are
Are ladybugs oviparous
oviparous: lay eggs, the 'ovi' part means egg
Yes a flamingo is oviparous.