Egg laying mammals are called monotremes.
Egg-laying animals are commonly referred to as oviparous. This term encompasses a wide range of creatures, including birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, and some invertebrates, that reproduce by laying eggs.
Some are, yes. Are finned creatures that breathe through gills birds?
Most chickens are used for both egg laying and meat. A chicken lays the most year in her first year of egg laying. After two years, she is finished with her job of egg laying and is sent to the grocery store for someone to eat.
A lemur is not actually a marsupial at all. It is a placental mammal, meaning the young are fully developed within the mother's body, and not in a pouch. There is no such thing as an egg-laying marsupial. An egg-laying mammal is a monotreme, and there are only two such creatures in the world, the platypus and the echidna.
A group of echidnas is commonly referred to as a "parade." These unique mammals are known for their spiny coats and egg-laying abilities, which set them apart in the animal kingdom. While they are often solitary creatures, the term "parade" is used to describe them when they are seen together.
The hen lays the egg. The term "hen" refers to a female chicken, and it is the female that is responsible for laying eggs.
No. A crocodile is an egg-laying reptile. A platypus is an egg-laying mammal.
The platypus and the echidna are egg laying mammals. Egg-laying mammals are known as monotremes.
There are no egg-laying marsupials. There are, however, two types of mammals which are egg-laying, and they are known as monotremes. Platypuses and echidnas are both monotremes, the only known egg-laying mammals.
The platypus and echidna are recognised as egg-laying mammals. They are monotremes, which are egg-laying mammals.
No. Egg-laying mammals are monotremes.
Platypi Snails Echidnas Frogs Salmon Ostriches Chameleons Moths Pythons Hummingbirds Chickens Crocodiles