No, ladybugs do not sit on their eggs. The ladybug lays her eggs in a place that is safe from prey and close to a food source for the babies.
No. She lays the eggs and then leaves. The eggs hatch and the babies are on their own.
Yes, she leaves them so that they can grow up on their own.
Cuckoos do this.
a frog or toad lays it's eggs in water and then leaves them to hatch and grow on their own
A cuckoo burrow is a narrow tunnel or chamber in the ground where a cuckoo bird lays its eggs. The cuckoo does not build its own nest but instead lays its eggs in the nests of other bird species, tricking them into incubating and raising its young.
Nah, my bearded dragon lays eggs but because we don't have a male beardie they won't hatch.
They spawn on beds. The males typically make a bed in the spring and the female lays her eggs in it. Then the male releases his sperm on the eggs and guards the bed until the eggs hatch and the fry are old enough to be on their own.
The mum lays the eggs then leaves. She doesn't wait for them to hatch. The hatchlings have to cope on their own.
No it stays with the babys until they are about five days old and then they leave them to be on their own.
Yes, the cowbird is a brood parasite that lays its eggs in the nests of other bird species. The host birds unknowingly raise the cowbird chicks as their own, often at the expense of their own offspring.
Catfish eggs are fertilized by the male after being They must be goldfish eggs. It is nearly impossible to have catfish breed on their own in a tank or pond. Any fish female can have eggs, the eggs are fertilized after the female lays the eggs. So if the eggs hatch then most likely they be goldfish.
A cuckoo doesn't make a nest of it's own. Instead it lays an egg in another birds nest. The cuckoo relies on the other (smaller) birds to raise it's young for it. Cuckoo birds lay their eggs in clocks. I thought everyone knew that. It is the Brown-headed Cowbird that lays their eggs in other birds' nests.