um ovelsly uv been watching 2 much sponge bob cause a sponge is an object NOT a living thing
Um, obviously you are both unable to properly use the Google Search feature or Wikipedia. Sponges can be synthetic, but there are most definitely creatures called sea-sponges. These natural sponges can be found in their dead, dry form at luxury bath shoppes and in the paint section of local hardware stores. Live sponges live from 17 to 8,840 metres under the sea, and are multicellular animals that have no nervous system, but rely on water flow for oxygen, nutrients, and waste removal. Some are mobile, and prey on small crustaceans, but most are solely filter-feeders. They can produce asexually when small clusters of cells break away from the parent organism and multiply, and can reproduce sexually as well. Sponges are hermaphrodites, meaning they have male and female sex cells, and can self-impregnate. Offspring may number in the thousands.
Synthetic sponges are made of spun plastic and/or foam. they are not live, but can harbor cultures of bacteria, yeast, and molds. Bleaching, washing in the dishwasher, or microwaving the sponge for thirty seconds is sufficient to kill these possibly harmful colonies.
Dolphins usually give birth to one calf per pregnancy. Although, occasionally they will give birth to multiple offspring.
Females give birth to many offspring.
They do not give birth, but lay eggs. Females are reported to lay 3-12 eggs in June that hatch in September.
It depends on what species of animal you are referring to - cows could have twins, does and ewes could have up to four offspring and sows could have up to 15 piglets.
A cheetah can give birth to as few as one cub and as many as nine cubs. Average litter size is three to five cubs.
Copperheads don't lay eggs; they give birth. A typical litter has 4 to 7 offspring.
Usually between two and ten pups, which grow in eggs and hatch inside the mother.
Four
i looked this up along time ago but i think i remember i think its 3 or 4
The Thylacine gave birth to 3-4 offspring - known as joeys - each breeding season.
Killer whales give birth to one calf, every five years. Gestation lasts on average 15 to 18 months.
Mares are made to give birth to only one foal at a time. Rarely a mare will deliver twin foals that are able to survive, but this is truly a rarity.