yes. All animals need a mate to produce. It will have to mate with its partner then will have to wait about 3 weeks before the eggs come they will. When they do it will be about 8 weeks intill they hatch. The only things that dont need a mate to reproduce are some plants waterlife and bugs. Obly some though like starfish. Look up Asexaul reproduction to find out more.
No, different types of turtles can only mate with each other if they are both part of the same sub species. for instance yellow belly sliders and red eared sliders can mate. but a painted turtle and box turtle would not mate.
Just leave them alone they will breed when they want to. Well during their hibernation they will mate and might lay eggs. But you cant make them breed they do it themselves.They can miss out of laying their eggs but they will in autumn
No, a boy (male) box turtle cannot lay eggs. Only female box turtles have the reproductive anatomy necessary to produce and lay eggs. Males can mate with females, but they do not possess the capability to lay eggs themselves.
Yes
Yes, all stick insects can produce unfertilized eggs via parthenogeneses. Some species do have males which can produce fertilized eggs, but all females are able to produce eggs without a mate.
Your question is some what unclear but I will try my best to answer it. A female turtle doesn't have to mate to lay eggs. So even a lone female turtle may lay unfertilized eggs. If an adult male and female turtle are kept together then they will mate. If the female doesn't have sand or dirt to lay her eggs in then she may lay her eggs in the water or on whatever land possible. If you know your turtle is pregnant and put her in an separate enclosure for 4 months then yes she probably will lay eggs in there.
A Painted Turtle can only "procreate" (have young) with another Painted Turtle but they have been known to "mate" (have sex) with Red Eared Sliders and Yellow Belly Sliders. They probably wouldn't try to mate with any other kind of turtle, other than a similar species of water turtle like maybe a Map Turtle. For instance, a painted Turtle probably would not try to mate with a Soft Shell Turtle or a Snapping Turtle (or any land turtle like a Box Turtle) because they would not recognize it as a possible mate. When a Painted Turtle tries to mate with a Slider, it is because its instincts are telling it that based on size, shape, and mating displays and behaviors, etc., it is another Painted Turtle. Interestingly, Red Eared Sliders and Yellow Bellied Sliders rages currently overlap and where they do there is a lot of unsuccessful mating going on between the two species but they cannot procreate. That is part of the "definition" of a separate species.
Yes turtles will lay eggs if they have not mated. The eggs will not be fertile in most cases, unless the turtle has mated previously. A growing number of species are known to retain sperm to produce mixed parentage clutches, sometimes for several years.
that is not true a sea turtle bites when it wants a mate i know i had two
Yes, Zorua and Ditto will produce Zorua eggs.
Female turtles need to have a male turtle mate with them while they are in season in order to lay fertilized eggs
no, they do not. Actully, a female can mate and produce eggs several times before dying of old age.