One, because their eggs were remarkably large, they could only care for one at a time.
No, dodos are not mammals; they were flightless birds belonging to the pigeon family. They lived on the island of Mauritius and became extinct in the late 17th century. Dodos were characterized by their large size, stout bodies, and distinctively large beaks. As birds, they laid eggs and were warm-blooded, unlike mammals.
170,000,000,000
Dodo birds no longer lay eggs, as they are an extinct species.
No, eggs do not get heavier. The weight of an egg is determined by the amount of material it contains, and this does not change after it has been laid.
Eggs laid on land are hatched on the land and eggs laid in the water hatch in the water. *o*
A sea turtle's eggs get laid in sand.
If three birds laid an odd number of eggs each, and altogether they laid 19 eggs, the possible combinations are: 3, 7, and 9 eggs respectively.
I'm assuming you are referring to aquarium fish. The amount of eggs laid can vary greatly between species. Dozens can often be expected from most fish.
How old is your fish? Your fish may have laid eggs, After a fish has laid eggs it will pass on, one of my fantails died after it laid eggs :(
sit on the eggs
Yes. `The chicken laid five eggs.` is a correct sentence.
It laid about 15 eggs