Fish eggs are not eaten by dragonfly larvae. Dragonfly larvae eat small fish, very small fish and tadpoles. They do not eat fish larvae. A lot of fish eat the larvae out of there own nests.
Dragonfly larvae, or 'nymphs', are predatory and will eat small fish!
no some get eaten while they are in there shell
Caviar.
The Dipper eats insects and their larvae, fish eggs, and small fish.
Blackfly larvae are found in streams and rivers attached to rocks. The larvae are eaten by large insects such a mayflies, and stoneflies as well as small fish.
Balloon fish lay eggs. They are then left for fertilization by the male. The male fish may help the female release her eggs by rubbing her side.
First of all, you need to know which animals lay eggs. Birds, amphibians, insects, fish, and reptiles all lay their eggs in rainforests. Now, the animals that eat birds eggs include reptiles, primates, rodents, and bigger birds. Amphibian eggs are eaten by fish and fish eggs are eaten by amphibians; sometimes birds and mammals will eat aquatic eggs. Fish will also eat other fishes eggs. Reptile eggs are usually not eaten because the reptiles guard them well. But if they are, it is usually by birds. Insect eggs are eaten by very small vertebrates, like frogs or mice, and most invertebrates, from spiders to woodlice to beetles.
Yes. Most female fish will lay around 50 eggs at a time and the male will fertilize them with his sperm.
Some of this salamander's predators includes skunks, raccoons, turtles, chipmunks, squirrels, opossums, and snakes. As eggs and larvae, salamanders are eaten by fish, turtles, aquatic insects, birds, frogs, and crayfish.
The species is an Egg-Scattering fish, with Planktonic eggs and larvae. It has not yet been successfully bred in the aquarium.
Kinda-sorta. Bottlenose dolphins swallow most of their food whole. So if they catch a fish that's carrying eggs, the eggs will be eaten as well. But they don't go searching for fish eggs only.
Sailfish are oviparous, meaning they reproduce by laying eggs. The female typically releases thousands of eggs into the water, which are fertilized by the male as they are released. This spawning usually occurs in warm, open waters, and the fertilized eggs float and develop into larvae. After a few days, the larvae hatch and begin their life as free-swimming fish.