yes just like a chicken
The Great White Shark has a generally simple life cycle. They hatch from their eggs, they feed and grow, until they are adults, from there mate and then eventually die.
water
Usually between two and ten pups, which grow in eggs and hatch inside the mother.
Marine biologists believe C. megalodon was viviparous, keeping its young developing internally until their birth. In other species, such as the great white shark, the young hatch from eggs inside the female and feed on unhatched eggs until they mature enough and are set loose.
No. They are born live.
They don't lay EGGs the eggs hatch inside the mother shark
As per the data available, the have a 11 month gestation period. Eggs develop and hatch in the mother shark's uterus and continue to develop during the gestation period. Unborn sharks too indulge in intrauterine cannibalism (stronger unborn pups eating their weaker womb-mates).
Shark eggs are commonly known as mermaid's purses. These are protective cases that house the developing shark embryo until it is ready to hatch.
The cookie cutter shark is one of the many species of sharks that does lay eggs. The newborns remain inside the eggs until they are fully developed and then they hatch and are on their own.
Three ways that sharks can have babies: eggs are laid (Whale Shark), eggs hatch inside the mother and then are born, or pups (baby skarks) grow inside the mother (Mako Shark). Sharks can have up to 100 babies at one time. Gestation periods are different too, ranging from 14 months to 24 months depending on the species. Tiger Shark 14-16 months, Great White 14-18 months, Dogfish Shark 18 to 24 months. There are over 400 species of sharks. Great White Shark have their young in the fall in warmer waters of southern California.
Well, the length of time for an egg to hatch depends on the species of shark. At my aquarium store, we had a banded shark egg hatch after four months and four days in our store. I have no experience with marbled cat shark eggs.
Yes