?
sexually
thay jam and chill
A Mule cannot reproduce. It would need more DNA of a Horse and of a Donkey to make a Mule.
They mate in the ocean, and then the females come onto land and make sand nests and lay the eggs
I think they take them to the zoo. And they will repreduce babies. That is how they can take them off the list
no ... when fish are borned thay has a bag that is full of eggs and when it grows another fish comes and kiss in the mouth and breakes the bag ,the eggs come out and grow .
Cells are able to grow, develop, and reproduce through processes such as cell division, DNA replication, and protein synthesis. These processes allow cells to increase in size, differentiate into specialized cell types, and create new cells through mitosis or meiosis. Regulatory mechanisms within the cell ensure that these processes occur in a controlled and coordinated manner.
are your hamsters currently on their mother? hamsters repreduce milk and so maybe your hamsters are just drinking her milk. from kennedyage 11
Fish reproduce through spawning, where the female releases eggs and the male releases sperm into the water. Fertilization occurs externally, and the fertilized eggs develop into larvae before growing into juvenile fish. Some fish species have internal fertilization where the female retains the eggs inside her body until they hatch.
because there company (teletubbie company) got into administartion and sadly shut down the place you can now see teletubbes on google earth type in stratford-apon-aven, warwickshire, redhill
Well, yes. Female reindeer keep their antlers. Although, in spite of the fact I am a true fan of science(I am an aithiest. I only celebrate Christmas for fun), I disagree with the fact they are all female. It is most likely, but come on- the guy's magic! Of course, they would need a male to repreduce, so they have to have at least 1 male, or they would die out. female reindeers do no have antlers and they are a doe.male reindeers have antlers
The first fully modern color TV was announced in 1944, but color TV sets did not go on sale in the US until 1953.Color television has a long history reaching back to 1928. It's roots go back just a little further still.In 1925 John Logie Baird demonstrated the first working television system in London England. It used a spinning disc with holes in it to produce a moving image. This was the system used by the BBC for its first public television broadcasts in 1929. It was also the basis for Baird's demonstration of color television in 1928. By combining three discs with colored light sources and mirrors, Baird demonstrated the principles of using red, green and blue light to generate a full color image. The resulting product was cumbersome, poor resolution and probably noisy. But it did work and the principle of breaking down an image into three colors has remained in place until today. By the time Baird had a working color system, the BBC had committed to using the monochrome version and electronic versions replaced his electro-mechanical systems in the 1930s.In the early 1952, color was introduced as a commercial service in the US. Technically, it was a success but commercially, it was a flop. The color televisions could not show the existing monochrome transmissions so take up was poor and the whole service was withdrawn after only a few months.In 1954, RCA began their color service using an agreed signal standard known as NTSC. The standard was compatible with monochrome services already established. Unlike the previous attempt, this launch captured the imagination of the public and the following years saw an explosion of color television across the country.Other countries followed suit and by the end of the 1960s, most countries has color television.The color signal standards set out back in the 1950s have remained largely unchanged and are still in use today, more than half a century on.Color television has a long history reaching back to 1928. It's roots go back just a little further still.In 1925 John Logie Baird demonstrated the first working television system in London England. It used a spinning disc with holes in it to produce a moving image. This was the system used by the BBC for its first public television broadcasts in 1929. It was also the basis for Baird's demonstration of color television in 1928. By combining three discs with colored light sources and mirrors, Baird demonstrated the principles of using red, green and blue light to generate a full color image. The resulting product was cumbersome, poor resolution and probably noisy. But it did work and the principle of breaking down an image into three colors has remained in place until today. By the time Baird had a working color system, the BBC had committed to using the monochrome version and electronic versions replaced his electro-mechanical systems in the 1930s.In the early 1952, color was introduced as a commercial service in the US. Technically, it was a success but commercially, it was a flop. The color televisions could not show the existing monochrome transmissions so take up was poor and the whole service was withdrawn after only a few months.In 1954, RCA began their color service using an agreed signal standard known as NTSC. The standard was compatible with monochrome services already established. Unlike the previous attempt, this launch captured the imagination of the public and the following years saw an explosion of color television across the country.Other countries followed suit and by the end of the 1960s, most countries has color television.The color signal standards set out back in the 1950s have remained largely unchanged and are still in use today, more than half a century on.The first color television was demonstrated in 1928 by John Logie Baird. This Scottish inventor demonstrated the world's first operating monochrome television, called a Televisor in March of 1925. The color version used three signals to carry and repreduce red, green and blue lighting to build a full color image. The system was electro-mechanical with a rotating disc required for each of the three colors and so it was cumbersome by modern standards. Nonetheless, the demonstration showed that full color television could be realised by mixing the three primary colors and it is still this principle that is in use today for color television.From that time onwards, color television was developed to the point that the 1950s saw the first commercial broadcasts in the US. The first attempt was in 1952 by CBS. Although it was a technical success, it was a commercial failure and was withdrawn after only a few months. Two years later, RCA began color broadcasting and this time, it was a commercial success.