Yes, it is. A female parakeet can lay 4 to 9 eggs, laying one every second day.
A parakeet lays 3*3=9 in three days
Chickadees begin to lay eggs when they are 9 months to a year
They lay, on the average, three to eight eggs. Only one clutch of eggs is laid per year. A swan builds their nests out of stems and leaves from plants such as cattails and sedges. Trumpeters often nest on top of muskrat or beaver lodges.
1.5 x 6 = 9 so 6... i think
A female wolf spider can lay up to 300 eggs
None, peacocks are male. Peahens, the female peafowl lay 2-9 eggs yearly.
they produce 1000's each time the lay eggs.
2 to 9, with an average of 5.
Emus are known to lay eggs 13.5 cm in length and 9 cm in width. Compared to the Ostrich, Ostrich eggs on average are about 15.4 cm long and 12.9 cm wide.
You shouldn't really look at the month but, in a YEAR, not month, not week, a YEAR it should lay 8-9 eggs. It shouldn't be laying eggs every month or else it will die. And if it is, try putting warm olive oil down where the eggs come out (which I know you wouldn't try) or take it to an emergency room.
The answer is none. Birds don't give birth, they lay eggs. And peacock is the name of the male of the species, and male birds don't even lay eggs. The female is called peahen and is the one that does the egg laying.
There are multiple types of lampreys, so I'm not sure if you needed an answer for a specific type or not. However, the Pacific Lamprey (which are found all the way from Baja California to the Bering Sea and also Asia) lay approximately 10,000 to 100,000 eggs. These are, obviously, quite small eggs!