A queen honey bee can live anything up to five years and she will lay eggs right up to her death. If the queen's egg laying declines too much for the colony, they will replace her.
Queens of other species of bee (bumble bee, solitary bees and so on) are hatched and mated in the autumn/fall, hibernate over the winter, then will live until the end of the following summer.
MY head
a frog or toad lays it's eggs in water and then leaves them to hatch and grow on their own
After a butterfly lays eggs, it typically does not live very long. The lifespan of an adult butterfly is relatively short, usually only a few weeks, as its main purpose is to reproduce. Once the eggs are laid, the butterfly's life cycle is complete and its role in the continuation of the species is fulfilled.
Yes a toad does lay eggs a toad lays eggs in long strips while a frog lays eggs in clumps. They both lay eggs in water.
ostrich
Honey bees queens lay eggs, they do not bear live young so can't be said to be pregnant.
It takes up to 15 weeks before she lays her eggs.
2 years
2 years
A Golden Eagle lays eggs - it doen't have pregnancies.
No; a bear is not a monotreme. A monotreme is a mammal which lays eggs. Bears do not lay eggs, but give birth to live young. There are only three monotremes: the platypus, the short-beaked echidna and the long-beaked echidna.
Most mammals give birth to live young. The only mammals which lay eggs - the platypus and the echidna - are known as monotremes. The platypus lays its eggs on land, in a chamber at the end of a long burrow it digs in the riverbank or creek bank. The echidna actually develops a rudimentary pouch into which it lays a single egg during breeding season.