yes some times =)
they lay there eggs in the sand but so nobody can break them they make a hole and then they lay them and cover them.
They lay there eggs in the sand like nomarl turtles but they have to bury them rell deep.
most lay their eggs in the sand or near by grass.
In the wild, they dig holes in the sand on a beach and lay their eggs there.
eggs.Sea turtles is the subject. They are performing the action.The action is "lay". That is what is being done.Eggs is the direct object. That is what is being lain.In the sand is the preposition. That is where the event takes place.To separate the preposition from the direct object, you've got to consider which one the action is affecting.Are the sea turtles laying sand? No.The direct object answers the question "what?""The Sea turtles lay in the sand." They lay what?"The sea turtles lay eggs in the sand."The sentence still makes sense without the preposition:Sea turtles lay eggs.
A turtle lays eggs and burries the eggs in the sand. Then they hach.
In the sand on a sea shore.
In the sand on a sea shore.
Yes, some turtles do. Sometimes to keep warm and to keep them away from preditors.
No, once in each year, sea turtles get out of the ocean, dig a hole in the sand, lay their eggs in the sand, than cover the hole with sand.
Turtles will dig a pit (hole) in the beach, lay their eggs in the pit, cover them with sand and then return to the sea.
No. Semi-Aquatic Turtles like the Red eared Slider will only lay eggs on land, not under water.