Coptotermes termites, commonly known as drywood termites, can lay a significant number of eggs daily, with a queen capable of producing anywhere from 1,000 to 3,000 eggs per day, depending on environmental conditions and colony health. This prolific egg-laying contributes to the rapid growth of termite colonies. The exact number can vary based on factors such as species, environmental conditions, and the age of the queen.
Termites work 24 hours (around the clock)
A queen termite can lay 30,000 eggs in a day.
Once established a Queen will lay close to 1000 eggs per day. This fact and more information on termites can be found via the related link attached to this answer.
more than humans
2,000 eggs a day
5 eggs in a day
27 eggs a day.
450 eggs
Subterranian termites, the most common kind, live in the soil, from just below the surface to as much as 12 feet down. Up to two million termites inhabit the colony. These colonies consist of a network of tunnels and chambers built around a King and Queen whose sole job is to reproduce. In fact, many as 55 termite species, queens can lay up to 86,000 eggs a day.
up to 30 000 termites and ants per day!
100 eggs
I read a case study where a man slipped into a coma whilst camping, and termites ate into hiss genitals, which were explosed at the time. He was discovered a day later, and taken to hospital. His mangled genitals had termite eggs inside them. Apparantly he collapsed on a termite nest.