The term "male cocktail roll" is likely a misunderstanding or a miscommunication. If you're referring to the role of males in the production of eggs in a biological context, male animals typically contribute sperm for fertilization. In many species, males may also play roles in courtship, territory defense, or parental care, depending on the species' reproductive strategies. If you meant something else, please provide more context for clarification.
A cocktail is an alcoholic beverage. There is no gender for it. A cockatiel is a bird which has a gender.
you shoot it and cruch the eggs
19 days
Emu eggs are incubated and hatched by the male emu. Also, the male may incubate the eggs of several females within the same nest. During the time he sits on the eggs, his metabolic rate slows, he does not eat or drink at all, and he stands just a couple of times each day to roll and turn the eggs. Average incubation of emu eggs takes around 8 weeks.
Give that cocktail bird a flaming shot of whiskey! If it is her first clutch it isn't unusually for ther other eggs not to be viable (cut back on the beer and wine for thar cocktail bird!
Male birds do not lay eggs
There are no male animals that lay eggs. Many people think that a male sea horse lays eggs, but a female sea horse lays eggs and the male carries them and takes care of it.
The female crab lays the eggs, and not the male.
While a hen is sitting on her eggs, she will stand up off of them for a moment, and roll them. This is important to help the chicks hatch out helathy and strong.
The eggs would not hatch if not fertilised by a male. A female butterfly will lay her eggs only after being fertilised by a male butterfly.
The eggs would not hatch if not fertilised by a male. A female butterfly will lay her eggs only after being fertilised by a male butterfly.
yes the female fighter has eggs before she meets the male, when they meet and do there business the female will release her eggs and the male will fertilise the eggs