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No. Penguins do not live in the Arctic. They are found in the Southern Hemisphere, including around the edges of the Antarctic continent, but they do not live in the Northern polar regions.
You will still produce eggs after a hysterectomy until your body goes through menopause. The eggs are still viable the regardless of the hysterectomy.
It depends on the species. Many species of frogs lay their eggs in water, but not all do e.g. the Corroboree frog.Also, frogs of the genus Pristimantis lay their eggs on land, where they do not undergo a tadpole stage, hatching as fully metamorphosed baby frogs. Some species of frogs even give birth to live young, such as members of the African genus Nectophrynoides and other species found in the Andes and Central America.
maybe but no one can be certein
Goose eggs are called eggs (the same as chicken eggs are still eggs)
No it does not itch if the eggs are dead
No, the majority of chicken eggs are not fertilised
yes unless the eggs are eaten then no
Yes. Insects don't really incubate their eggs; the only parental care for eggs is cleaning and protecting them, and as long as no predators come to eat them, parasites to lay their eggs in them, or diseases kill the young inside, the eggs will still hatch! Stinkbug parents do often look after the hatched young, so they might have better chances of getting through their nymphal stage with the parents around, though.
the water won't affect the eggs and they still have plenty of time to hatch
the Baltimore Checkerspot lays around 700 eggs at a time but heir population is still very small because deer accidentally eat the leaves of the white turtlehead with the eggs on it!.
Mammals don't lay eggs. The only mammal that lays eggs is a platypus, and they have leathery feeling eggs, but still a shell.