well, turtles and lizards mostly. they can lay up to about 150 eggs.
Some toads lay tens of thousands of eggs. The cane toad, according to Wikipedia, lays from 8000 to 25000 eggs at once in strings that can reach 20 meters in length.
Ducks, geese, and other waterfowl that are often visited by nest- robbing creatures often lay as many as 20 eggs in a clutch in order to make sure that some of their eggs will survive.
a woodpecker replaced 71 eggs in 73 days when researchers tested how many eggs she would lay.
The least number of eggs a bird can lay is 1.
ostriches egg is the largest egg in the world
ostriches egg is the largest egg in the world
Yes, turtles lay eggs. The number and frequency of eggs depends on the species of turtle.
Eggs don't reproduce. Whatever that's in the egg has to grow to a sexually mature creature first, in order to mate, and then lay eggs.
The true anteaters, such as the giant anteater, do not lay eggs. There is a creature called the echidna, or spiny anteater, which lays eggs. Although it eats ants, it is not closely related to the true anteaters.
No.
Just an educated guess would be an Ostrich lays the largest while the Hummingbird would lay the smallest.
No. Toads and toads lay the same number of eggs obviously....But if you mean do toads lay more eggs then frogs then yes they do.
The mythical creature known as the dragon is believed to reproduce by laying eggs. This apparently applies to all dragons.
Generally speaking, no. Male fowl do not lay eggs. However, there is a mythological creature known as a cockatrice that is said to hatch from an egg laid by a cock and incubated by a toad(or a snake, depending on the story).
I have never heard of any species that can do both. One would assume that a creature would either lay internally fertilised, (or unfertilised) ova in the form of eggs, or produce live young. For a creature to do both would be most unusual.