sometimes .. they only protect them if they ain't looking for food..
No. Reptiles don't stick around to take care of the young. The eggs hatch and the babies are on their own.
All birds lay eggs and most of them take care of their young. However, a few mammals and amphibians fit those two criteria, as well. I am unaware of any living reptiles that fit that criteria, although some guard their nests until their young hatch, but many if not most dinosaurs raised their young, and they all laid eggs.
Modern reptiles provide nothing for their young, they simply lay the eggs and leave. However there is evidence showing that some dinosaurs provided care for their young in large nests similar to what modern birds do.
Reptiles and fish lay eggs and can't sit in one place waiting for them to hatch like birds
They didn’t care for them. Like the reptiles of today they lay eggs and leave the nest.
Reptiles typically have limited parental care for their young, with some species providing protection for their eggs and hatchlings and others providing no care at all. Once the eggs are laid or the hatchlings emerge, the young are usually left to fend for themselves.
Reptiles whose young hatch from eggs laid outside the mother's body are oviparous. These reptiles include species like turtles, lizards, and snakes that lay eggs in nests or burrows and do not provide parental care to their offspring once the eggs are laid.
fish and reptiles lay eggs
Most reptiles lay eggs.
They don't. Reptiles don't care for the young.
No, after they have laid eggs the moths die
reptiles lay eggs, if thats what you mean