adder? not sure if there rare though also, theres this weard thing that looks like an anteater, lays eggs, is a mammle, has spines and eats worms.
Very few types of butterflies hibernate. Most of them just die off in the winter, leaving their eggs to hatch and start a new generation the next year. The monarch is the one species that migrates southward for the winter. Only the tortoiseshells, mourning cloak, and a few anglewings actually "hibernate" as adult butterflies and come back out in the spring.
Very few types of butterflies hibernate. Most of them just die off in the winter, leaving their eggs to hatch and start a new generation the next year. The monarch is the one species that migrates southward for the winter. Only the tortoiseshells, mourning cloak, and a few anglewings actually "hibernate" as adult butterflies and come back out in the spring.
They hatch in Summer, hibernate through the winter, and turn into Isabella Tiger Moths in Spring. The moths live through Summer, lay eggs, and die.
Butterflies don't lay eggs then.
what do you think of this?? Cryogenics??... Stupidly if you think of it, the duck will die.. it dies.. poor ducky. Ducks are warmblooded animals and very susceptible to cold, even with it's feathers for coating it won't stand temperature that low. Hypothermia would definitely kill it.
It take between four to eight weeks for the sandhill crane eggs to hatch. This species of crane is found throughout the U.S. and migrates south during winter months.
The bald eagle is no longer considered an endangered species. The banning of the pesticide DDT, which caused the eagle's eggshells to be too thin to hatch, has saw the population rebound to the point where the bald eagle is now considered "Least Concern" by the IUCN.
They die off in countries with a winter season, the adults having mated and laid eggs in the summer. These eggs overwinter and hatch in the spring to start a new population of summer grasshoppers.
It depends on the species.
Katydids neither hibernate nor migrate. The insects in question (Tettigoniidae family) live in low-lying vegetation or trees, where eggs are deposited before the adults die in winter. The eggs of these insect- and plant-eating katydids, also known as bush crickets and long-horned grasshoppers, will hatch the following spring.
there are endanged because people/other species steal there eggs and cook/eat them.Consequently the eggs dont hatch so new logger headed turtles dont get born plese find out at www.imstupid.com
They must hatch in the early spring so that they will have time to mature for the fall and winter months.