No. Zebras do not lay eggs. There are only three egg-laying species of mammal the platypus, the long-beaked echidna and the short-beaked echidna. These egg-laying mammals are known as monotremes. Zebras are not monotremes, but placental mammals, or eutherians.
they are just like chickens...... they can lay different color eggs
If it is younger it will lay about 8 eggs and if it is older it will lay about 5.
Presuming you mean Zebra Danios, over 100. They are egg scatterers and will eat their own eggs if the eggs are exposed!
the female cant lay egg without the male
Sometimes it's because the finches don't like each other or because maybe they're just not ready yet. It varies with breed but usually Zebra finches are quicker to adapt and quicker to lay eggs.
Zebra danios are not live-bearing fish, so they do not get pregnant. Instead, the female will lay eggs, and the male will fertilize them. The eggs will hatch about 2 days after being fertilized.
Yes, zebrafish are egg-laying species. The female zebrafish can lay hundreds of eggs which are externally fertilized by the male. These eggs are adhesive and typically attached to plants or substrate in the water.
yes they can, as ours laid one last night lol
ummm since zebras are mammals they dont produce any eggzz
The Zebra Finch (Taeniopygia guttata) is a native of Australia and can also be found in Indonesia and East Timor. It is a popular pet in the United States. The average clutch has 2 - 7 eggs. They can have 3-4 clutches per year, so that would be a maximum of 28 eggs per year. However, if you only have a female, and she starts laying eggs on her own, and she doesn't go broody, she could lay as many as 100 eggs in a year. This is not a normal occurrance, however.
They lay eggs and heat it with covered grass
No. Zebras are placental mammals, so they give live birth. The only egg-laying mammals, or monotremes, are the platypus and the echidna.