No, all species do not have the same incubation period; it varies widely among different species. Factors such as the species' size, reproductive strategies, environmental conditions, and the type of eggs or embryos can influence the duration of incubation. For example, bird eggs may incubate for a few weeks, while reptile eggs can take several months. Additionally, some mammals have gestation periods instead of incubation, further diversifying reproductive timelines across species.
Bird eggs are laid at different times, so they usually hatch first laid first hatch and so on. This is more common among raptors. For other birds, embryos develop when the egg is incubated, and birds will delay incubation until all eggs are laid so that all the chicks will hatch at the same time.
ALL breeds of chickens have the same incubation period. 21-28 days are how long mine usually take.
Sorry, Tay-Sachs is not a germ-caused infectious disease, so there is no incubation period, at all. Tay-Sachs is inherited from a person's mother and father.
i m confused whether all sub-clinical cases result in disease or not just like a case going through incubation period who'll have disease some time in future. Is there any definite difference between these two things.
Like all birds, kookaburras lay eggs. The incubation period of the eggs is around 24 days.
Almost all gecko species, with the exception of 4-5 specific species, lay 2 soft shelled eggs. These eggs are fertilized and within 30-45days these eggs will be layed in 3-6 inches of damp soil. the incubation period lasts anywhere from 30-90 days depending on species, size and temperature.
Its the same for all mammals(as far as I know). Varies greatly. A few days to a year. Typically 1 to 3 months, but anywhere from about a week to about a year.
Yes. They need to be kept at the same temperature for the whole incubation period. For instance, chickens = 102.5 degrees Fahrenheit for 21 days.
they can inter breed and produce fertile offspring.
No, not all bacteria are the same and there are variations within the species.
maybe all species have the same karyotype;/
same species yes