I have repeatedly observed the snails in my back garden digging into my freshly sown lawn. On removing them they leave a hole about 3-4cm deep, one had even laid its eggs and they were clearly visible. Fascinated, I tried to 'harvest' them for a bit of a science project with my daughter but squished them in the process! I am fascinated by this behavior as it is something I have never seen before.
like under ground no the eat vegetation you can find the under or in dark moist areas
Grasshoppers dig holes to lay there eggs.
In the wild, they dig holes in the sand on a beach and lay their eggs there.
Green Iguanas (female) will dig holes in the ground to lay eggs. She will dig additional holes to confuse would-be egg poachers. After that she leaves the eggs, the hatchlings will grow up by themselves.
They dig holes for their egg laying with ovipositer.
No they don't. They lay there eggs on the tree branches in a really deep nest...
When snails lay eggs they are acting out the natural process of reproduction.
they dig down in the dirt a few centimeters
Kiwi lay their eggs in a burrow which they dig in the ground.
yes
It depends on the type of snail. Maybe 30 to 20 eggs depends on the tip of the snail. Snails that lay their eggs in aquarium's tend to give birth from 200 to 300 eggs. Snails can only lay 2 at a time. Hermaphroditic snails lay about 80 eggs 6 times a year. Most land snails lay 40 to 60 eggs (according to some authors even 100). Well that's all I know about how many eggs a snail lays a year! :)
they dig to get warmer, like a sand blanket, they usually start to dig when they get older.
they live on beaches