Yes. They need to keep them warm and/or keep them safe from predators.
Yes, but the best place would be in a nest made of hay, grass or straw.
The Black-bellied Whistling-Duck, among others.
they lay eggs in the nest
no because the male duck will run away after the female duck has eaten it and the eggs that will be male.
Duck eggs are formed inside the female and fertilized inside the uterus. The eggs are then laid by the duck via a vaginal canal through an orifice called the vent.
Welll... a female duck only lays 3-8 eggs in its lifetime, but a snake can eggs whenevr it wants
No you need to have a female and male duck to have baby ducks.
Female ducks can still lay eggs without a male duck, the eggs just won't be fertilized, which means...no baby ducks.
A duck goes from kid to an adult at about 6 months. For a female duck that is when she will start laying her eggs.
If your duck is very colorful then its a male, the female duck (with every species) is not very colorful wich is the one that lays eggs.
To be more clear with this answer, female reptiles and birds can lay eggs regardless of having them fertilized or not. The female duck will lay an egg regardless of the rooster's actions. Furthermore, a rooster and duck are not compatible in breeding, so don't expect a chicken/duck hybrid or something like that.
Its a depression in the ground where the female lays her eggs
Well, male ducks can't lay eggs. (there like humans, only the females can lay eggs) If by chance you meant does a male duck have to fertilize all eggs? No, they do not have to, only in the spring (which is baby season) will the male fertilize the eggs.Hope that helps! :)
No. If the female attempted to hatch eggs without a male, the eggs won't be fertile, and the egg will just go rotten.
You simply remove her eggs, keeping her from setting and incubating them.