i guess the eggs will just die if the eggs are white they have died
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
You must put a female with a male but be sure to separate them after she lays the eggs as the male will kill her. You must be warned though, they produce a LOT of eggs and the females and males must be separated after they get older.
no, the female turtle needs a male to fertilize her eggs. she can hold her eggs for about 3 years. she can lay them before that though, if she wants.
No, the female cannot lay eggs without a male, unless they have mated before hand and the female is willing to continue laying the eggs.
females do, the male just protects the egg.
Eggs develope inside the body before being layed. If they weren't, the "baby" would be born live. Also, eggs need incubation, meaning a male and female have to share genes before the egg gets "fertilized". If that didn't happen, there would be no egg.
A leopards frogs life begins as an egg. Before becoming a egg a female and a male have to mate when its mating season. Right when the female goes in the water she begins to lay eggs. As the eggs come out, the male sprays gametes over the eggs to fertilize them. So that shows that the two events happen at the same time.
Turtles are not fish. The eggs are fertilized when the turtles mate, if a female lays eggs before mating then the eggs will be unfertilized and will never get fertilized.
Female eggs are produced in the ovaries, which are two small organs located in a woman's pelvis. The ovary releases a mature egg during ovulation, which then travels through the fallopian tube to the uterus.
For a female Betta to release eggs she needs to be squeezed by a male. As she releases her eggs the male fertilises them and then blows them into the nest of bubbles he has built. He then guards the eggs and looks after them until they develop into free swimming fry. Your account/story does not make much sense to me.
I Breed Lovebirds and when their is a female lovebird in a separated cage I often find infertile eggs laying on the bottom of the cage. If you leave them their you will soon get even up to 20 infertile eggs so when you see that the lovebird have layed this sort of eggs remove them after 1 day or so.
The eggs are fertilized before the female lays them, when she mates. The sperm swims to the eggs to fertilize them.