Many grasshoppers lay their eggs in the fall. By the next spring, the eggs are ready to hatch. When a baby grasshopper hatches, it wiggles slowly out of its egg. Then it pushes through the egg pod and makes its way up out of the hole. A baby grasshopper is called a nymph (NIHMF). Nymphs may be tiny, but they have huge appetites. In fact, nymphs eat even more than adult grasshoppers do.
yes female grasshoppers lay eggs
When the bearded dragons go through intercourse, the eggs are fertilized inside of the female already. So when the female lays the eggs, they are already fertilized.
Female turtles need to have a male turtle mate with them while they are in season in order to lay fertilized eggs
Most fish lay eggs that are externally fertilized. This means that the female fish releases her eggs into the water, where they are fertilized by the male fish's sperm. The fertilized eggs then develop outside the female's body until they hatch.
The eggs would not be fertilized, and no new offspring would be born.
No, pillbugs do not lay eggs. They are live-bearing organisms, which means that the female carries fertilized eggs in a pouch on her underside until they hatch into small pillbugs.
Hornets lay eggs. The queen hornet will lay fertilized eggs that develop into female worker hornets, and unfertilized eggs that develop into male hornets. These eggs hatch into larvae that eventually pupate into adult hornets.
Yes, female goldfish lay eggs which are fertilized by the cloud of milt that a male goldfish, if present, releases shortly afterward.yes they do when they mate
no
Supposedly, glofish can look pregnant without actually being pregnant. If the female is getting enough nutrients and there is a male glofish, it's possible the female will lay the eggs and have them fertilized.
alligators lay their eggs in a little hole
Yes. females in a lot of animals will lay eggs regardless if they are fertilized or not and regardless if a male is even present. This is true in birds, some reptiles and fish.