In animals that lay eggs, yes, the female is the egg-layer.
All eggs that are laid hatch outside the body
All animals have to go throw pregnancy first which is common in all female animals.
In all animals, the sex laying eggs is called a female!
Not close at all. Once the female has laid the eggs, she's gone, leaving the eggs to hatch on their own.
Apatosaurus, like all dinosaurs, reproduced by laying eggs. However, we don't have any specific information about Apatosaurus eggs. If they were like other sauropods, they laid a multitude of very large eggs.
When the female lays her eggs the male will come and fertilize them so that they can become babies. Or if the female does not want that she'll scare away the male so that no babies can be made. +++ The only animals that use external fertilisation as that answer describes, are the fishes. All other egg-laying animals fertilise internally, before the egg is developed and laid.
All fish can lay eggs without a male present. The male and female fish do not meet during reproduction. Eggs are fertilized only once they leave the female's body. The male will come later to fertilize them with his sperm after the female fish has laid the eggs and left
Same way that all mammals get pregnant. Male animals mates with the female, placing sperm in the female, which fertilizes the eggs of the female.
They will lay 2-3 eggs a few days apart, the female can take anywhere from 4-7 days to lay all of her eggs
Not all will survive. Eggs laid in the wild will be at risk of predators eating them. Additionally, some eggs laid may not be fertile.
yes All true dinosaurs were reptiles and laid eggs.
yes she did she got herself pregnant and when she went into the vines she laid eggs possibly more than 7