To keep it cool so that it doesn't start sweat.
This question is too vague - more information is needed! What egg? Why would it need to be ruptured? The egg in the question could be a chicken egg, or the egg produced by a female?
Spores are produced during sporogenesis, which is found specifically in plants, algae and fungi. No animals currently produce spores as a method of reproduction.
Because the Amanita muscaria reproduces with spores, it reproduces sexually. The spores are called basidiospores. The spores are spread by wind, and also by animals ingesting the mushrooms and spreading the spores in their waste.
They use these spores, these spores look like small bumps on the bottom of the leaf.
Meiosis is a special type of cell division necessary for sexual reproduction in eukaryotes. It is to make sperm and egg cells in animals and most of the plant cells, generally known as Gametocytes/spores(in plants)
Spores
They dont, algae produce spores to reproduce show have no need to flower; for the only purpose of flowers is to fertilise an egg to make a seed, spores do the same just without a partner (aka a-sexual reproduction)
The motile sperm need water so as to swim to meet the female egg. Also the spores when released need an environment with sufficient water so they can grow.
Club fungi reproduce asexually. This means they do not need a male to reproduce. They form spores on the basidia and these spores grow.
spores
2spores
no you dont
Some plants reproduce sexually through spores. As in the fern life cycle. Spores generally contain either an egg or sperm. When these spores reach the gametophyte of other ferns then they can combine to make a fertilized gametophyte which will grow into an adult fern.
The female spores of a conifer are called megaspores or macrospores. Megaspores develop into a female gametophyte, producing egg cells. Male spores of a conifer are called microspores and are formed from meiosis. Microspores develop into the male gametophyte, which produces sperm cells.
plants need spores pollen and seeds to reproduce
Unlike most plants, ferns reproduce using spores instead of seeds. Sporangium, brown spots located under a fern leaf, contains spores. When it rains, the spores are dragged from the granules where they travel to the ground, take root and grow.
The gamete. Haploid egg and sperm cells in sexually reproducing organisms.