Internal.
internal
It is internal because spider monkeys are mammals.
An ostrich lays eggs after the mating ritual. Therefore, the fertilization process is internal.
Not dragons as in the ones that breathe fire, but Chester Zoo have 3 'Vulnerable' Komodo Dragons, a (fingers crossed) breeding pair and a young male, who was born in a surprising incident when his mother gave birth without ever mating with a male!
They generally don't-- Komodos are typically very solitary except in mating season, and even then, they don't tend to enjoy each other's company much.
yes they will
Internal. The queen mates with several drones on a mating flight about a week after she emerges from the pupal cell. The sperm she receives is stored in an organ called the spermetheca and is sufficient to fertilize her eggs throughout her whole laying life.
No. Dragons are solitary creatures, even hostile to their own kind, except for mating.
Internal. A virgin queen goes out on a mating flight about 5 days after she hatches and mates with several drones (male bees) which fertilizes all the eggs that she produces throughout her life. She never has to mate again.
Internal, as do most mammals. Typically, it takes 3 porpoises -- the mating couple and one other to lift them up so them can breathe. Porpoises also live-nurse their young.
The mating itself is a type of external fertilization, but the mating position is called amplexus
No. The biology and chromosomes of humans and lizards are too different.