they visit nefarious online dating sights and spend wednesday nights at the community disco.
Daddy long legs, or harvestmen, do not have a specific number of eggs they must lay. The number of eggs can vary significantly depending on the species and environmental conditions; some may lay dozens, while others may lay hundreds of eggs. Female harvestmen typically lay their eggs in the soil or under debris to protect them from predators and environmental hazards. Once laid, the eggs develop independently until they hatch into juvenile harvestmen.
Yes, female daddy long-legs spiders do exist. They can be identified by their larger bodies compared to males, as well as their lack of prominent pedipalps (the small leg-like appendages near the mouth).
Yes. Storks are birds, and female birds lay eggs for reproduction.
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eggs
legs, eggs
The creatures most correctly called daddy-longlegs are in their own separate Order which is Opiliones. Common names for this Order are 1) daddy-longlegs, 2) harvestmen and 3) opilionids. They are characterized by having one basic body segment which shows segmentation on the posterior portion, at most 2 eyes and all 8 legs attach to the pill-like body segment. http://spiders.ucr.edu/daddylonglegs.html
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yes chickens can lay blue, green, red even purple eggs
sea legs
Yes, most Harvestmen (Daddy Long Legs) spiders reproduce sexually. The females lay eggs shortly after mating, or up to months later. Some species build nests for this purpose. A unique feature of harvestmen is that in some species the male is solely responsible for guarding the eggs resulting from multiple partners, often against egg-eating females, and subjecting the eggs to regular cleaning. The eggs can hatch anytime after the first 20 days, up to almost half a year after being laid. Harvestmen need from four to eight nymphal stages to reach maturity, with six the most common.