Blue tailed skink females will stay with their eggs to protect them and then leave after they hatch from one to two days.
Yes
No, the mother butterflies die soon after laying eggs.
They stay in the eggs for about thirty-five days.
Some baby starfish stay with their mother until they are able to survive on their own. Others are released as eggs into the water and do not stay with their mother.
Goldfish are not livebearers so they are never truly prenant. After the female goldfish lays her eggs a nearby male will release a cloud of milt and fertilize the eggs. After this if the mother and father goldfish are not removed from the eggs the eggs will be eaten. So in short a goldfish does not and should not stay with its mother.
Fertilised platypus eggs stay in the mother's body for around 28 days. The egg is incubated by the mother curling around it and keeping it warm and dry in the chamber of the burrow for another 10 days.
Ocelots are born live, not in eggs. A mother is pregnant for about 80 days.
The Mandarin fish never lives with it's mother. The mother lays it's eggs and leaves the eggs.
Yes, cockatiel eggs need to be kept warm. :}
It doesn't stay. She lays the eggs and leaves them. They hatch and they scatter.
Yes the cobra mother stay with their eggs because they will protect them from any harm. They leave as soon as the snakes are born. Note that the King Cobra is the only cobra to build a nest to protect its young.
It depends on what animal you mean? Young elephants (and human babies) remain with their mother for several years. Bird fledglings may only stay with their mother long enough to develop the power of flight. Turtles never see their mother - who returns to the sea once the eggs have been buried in the sand.
YES!!!!!!!!!!!!