A queen termite can lay 30,000 eggs in a day.
every 15 seconds
Once established a Queen will lay close to 1000 eggs per day. This fact and more information on termites can be found via the related link attached to this answer.
the single queen starts off the colony, so it starts with one ant. over days, the queen finds a safe home to lay eggs. She can lay 100s of eggs a day! Colonies can have from 50 ants to 10 000 ants.
A queen ant is about 4-10 millimeters , the double of a regular worker ant!
56 000, that's how much a queen termite can lay in a week.
Subterranian termites, the most common kind, live in the soil, from just below the surface to as much as 12 feet down. Up to two million termites inhabit the colony. These colonies consist of a network of tunnels and chambers built around a King and Queen whose sole job is to reproduce. In fact, many as 55 termite species, queens can lay up to 86,000 eggs a day.
A queen bee can lay about 1,500 to 2,000 eggs per day under optimal conditions. This translates to approximately 62 to 83 eggs per hour. Therefore, in an 8-hour period, a queen bee could lay around 496 to 664 eggs. However, the exact number can vary based on factors like the queen's age and the colony's needs.
Only one queen to a hive. If two queens are born at the same time, they will fight until one is dead.
It is usually rare for ant and termite colonies to interact, but in situations where the two colonies come into contact it depends on the species, size, and type of the two insects. In many cases, though, the more aggressive ant species will consume the termite colony.
HOW MANY EGGS DOES A QUEEN ANT HAVE?: Depending on the ants spiceies the amount will vary (change) many types of queen ants have between (75-100) eggs a day! it might seem unbielievable but it is true..... the reason you dont see that many ants is because many of the eggs will not survive for various reasons...... and because the nurse ,worker ,and feeding ants sadly do not live too long...... although queen ants have been recorded to live as long as 65 years.
A queen ant can lay hundreds to thousands of eggs in a single day, depending on the species. The egg-laying capacity of a queen ant is influenced by factors such as food availability, temperature, and age.
The rate at which the queen lays varies through the year. In winter the queen lays very few eggs, and may even stop laying altogether for a period. In spring her laying rate will rise, and in late spring she could be laying 2,000 eggs a day as the colony builds up to full strength. The rate will then slow down again through summer, and from the second half of summer colony numbers will reduce in preparation for winter.