Both Female and Male Eagles incubate the eggs. They actually take turns.
yes
Eagles breed via sexual reproduction so the male eagle and the female eagle mate. Once they have mated, they build a large nest made mostly of sticks called an eyrie. Since eagles are birds, they lay eggs. The female lays one to three or four eggs in the eyrie and both parents incubate the eggs (this means they gently sit on them to keep them warm). About a month and half later, the eggs hatch and the eagles are proud parents of baby eagles!
NO salmon dont incubate their eggs, fish dont incubate their eggs at all, they lay them and the male fish swims by the fish and releases the sperm near the eggs and they become fertilized outside of the female fish.
Yes, both male and female will incubate, often taking turns especially if it is very cold.
Female hummers lay eggs and incubate them until they hatch.
Female hummers lay eggs and incubate them until they hatch.
Yes. Platypuses are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. Female platypuses incubate their eggs. They do this by curling tightly around the eggs for around ten says, until they hatch.
They gently place their bodies over their eggs so their body heat will keep the eggs warm.
The eggs that incubate at a temperature between 90 and 93 degrees Fahrenheit will be males. While the eggs that incubate between 82 and 86 degrees will all be female and anything between those temperatures will be a good 50/50 mix of male and female.
Bedbugs and other insects lay eggs and move on. They do not incubate the eggs.
Sexually, of course. All birds do. Once pregnant, they lay eggs and incubate them in the nest.
Yes. Kookaburras incubate their eggs by sitting on them. Both the male and female sit on the eggs, sharing their incubation duties.