yes tey do
No, they reproduce by laying eggs.
Squids are egg layers. When they are ready to lay their eggs, they attach them to sea grasses or kelp. Sometimes however, they will wash up on the shore in the late spring time.
they lay eggs!
Giant squid are not asexual; they reproduce sexually. Male and female giant squids engage in mating, where males transfer sperm to females using specialized appendages. After mating, females lay thousands of eggs, which they typically protect until they hatch. This reproductive strategy is common among cephalopods, the class to which giant squids belong.
Squids lay about 200.000 eggs each time. This depends on the specimen though.
they lay eggs that stick to rocks. than a male come to fertilize them. Once the eggs have hatched, the hatchlings will drift to sallower waters to mature than swim back to deeper waters again. I am researching this information for my grade six project on the googly eyed glass squid, and I am inferring that other glass squids reproduce the same way. Hope this helps.
Squids do not have a very long life span, therefore the female often lays thousands of eggs. Most species of squid lay their eggs in masses on a sea bed but some carry their eggs to guard them.
Adult squid mate and lay eggs which then hatch and grow to adults.
Adult squid mate and lay eggs which then hatch and grow to adults.
Giant squids are to be in the wild. They are not to friendly to people.
800 is the most they can lay up to but they can lay less but they usually do not.
a giant squids prey is the size of a sperm whale