First of all, male "ducks" are called drakes. If the female is currently laying on her eggs trying to hatch them, it should be fine to leave the male around. If she's not take away the eggs from her. Unless they are fighting the male is fine.
there are ducks in place of the eggs
Ducks hatch eggs outside the body, so are oviparous.
the fact about duck eggs are that it take about 28 day to hatch.
Yes ducks lay eggs. Like every other bird.
No you need to have a female and male duck to have baby ducks.
Some species of ducks, like domestic ducks, can lay eggs without the presence of a male through a process called parthenogenesis. This occurs when the egg develops without fertilization. The eggs will not be viable for hatching into ducklings, though.
Ducks usually incubate their eggs for about 28 days
Ducks reproduce sexually, with a male duck (drake) fertilizing the eggs of a female duck (hen) through copulation. A duck pair will engage in courtship displays before mating occurs, with the female then laying and incubating the fertilized eggs. Asexual reproduction, such as cloning or parthenogenesis, is not a common method of reproduction in ducks.
Wild ducks certainly do and many farms have ducks that set eggs each spring but there are hatcheries that incubate duck eggs just as most chickens are produced in a hatchery.
I Breed Ducks, And it Reall Depends what Tpye of Duck you Got, Like I'v Got a Muscovy Duck and they Breed In Any Season But i Dont Know about Other Ducks but i Think Normally Ducks will Lay eggs in the Spring.
You can eat eggs from any type of duck, it is illegal to in any way kill a wild mallard duck. You can only eat domesticated mallard ducks or their eggs.
Khaki Campbell ducks lay up to 340 eggs a year.