snakes,because they can have 100 eggs....or more.
Not necessarily. Adaptations are changes in an animal's features or behaviour which enable it to live in a specific environment. Realistically, laying eggs is not an adaptation for a platypus, as it could just as easily bear live young in its chamber. An example of an adaptation in a platypus is its feet - they are webbed for swimming but the webbing is retractable, exposing the sharp claws, with which it can dig its burrow.
Yes, turtles have adaptations related to egg laying, such as specialized hind limbs for digging nests, a hard shell to protect the eggs, and a strong maternal instinct to care for the eggs until they hatch.
Yes, egg laying is a behavioral adaptation that allows certain species to efficiently reproduce and protect their offspring. This process is often linked to the species' evolutionary history and environmental factors that favor this method of reproduction.
yes
chipmunk
Most reptiles and amphibians are cold-blooded, egg laying, animals.
The platypus is an egg-laying mammal that secretes milk from mammary glands located in special grooves on its belly. The milk is then lapped up by the young platypus directly from the mother's skin.
A bird
possums
The echidna is a monotreme. It is an egg-laying mammal.
tazmainian devils eats all the dead animal laying around
a mammalian animal is an animal that sucks milk and give birth to babies not laying eggs