Sounds like a reptile to me.
some birds ,crabsalong time ago moas
Reptile
birds
Reptile!
Don't Kno
Reptiles
ok
frugbne
Platypus eggs are soft and leathery, rather than hard-shelled.
egg having shelled outer covering is known as cleodic egg its present only in reptiles and birds and other animal contain only noncleoidic eggs
The animal that is hatched out of the larger egg (e.g. emu) ends up waaaaaay bigger than the animal in the smaller egg (e.g. spider).
Zygote is immediately produced when an animal's egg cell is fertilized by the sperm.
Not that i know of, when a animal is in a egg its just feeding and growing or as you can say in 'Stasis".
The egg of a platypus is leathery. It is not hard-shelled like a bird's egg.
Turtle eggs (and tortoise eggs) can be either hard or soft-shelled, depending on the species.
to protect them from pridators
A bluebird.
Birds lay normal, hard-shelled eggs while reptiles usually lay eggs with a leathery shell that is flexible.
Monotremes are egg-laying mammals, and their eggs are not hard-shelled, but leathery. The monotremes include the platypus and echidna.Reptiles also lay rubbery/leathery eggs.
Platypus eggs are soft and leathery, rather than hard-shelled.
egg having shelled outer covering is known as cleodic egg its present only in reptiles and birds and other animal contain only noncleoidic eggs
You put a flaming piece of paper in the bottom of a beaker and place the hard boiled, shelled egg on top and the pressure sucks it in
The primary function - is to contain the developing embryo and its nutritional yolk-sac until the foetus is ready to emerge. That applies whether it's a hard-shelled egg like a bird, or a soft-shell like a reptile.
The eggs laid by monotremes (egg-laying mammals) are still called eggs. They are soft-shelled and leathery, rather than hard-shelled like birds' eggs.
egg