The flea can lay up to 50 eggs per day and around 500 in it's life span. the eggs will fall off the animal onto where they spend most of their time and the larve which will burrow deep into fibers will eat some of the eggs some of the flea droppings and will spend 2-4 weeks in an insectacide-resistant cacoon.
at least 50 eggs per day
Brown egg layers average 2 eggs every three days. White leghorns can produce an egg a day. If you have 75 hens for 50 eggs a day, then I would suggest three roosters to handle the fertilization job. And, be aware that you will have months where you get more than 50 eggs a day; production depends on hours of light per day and age of hen. Young layer hens will lay every day in the spring.
about 50 to 75 eggs per clutch depending on how many wesley kuhn's they ate!!
Fleas don't usually live in human hair but they sure do bite. So if you're living with a cat who has fleas be ready to wake up in the morning with red bite marks all over your skin. Sometimes fleas do live in human hair but as soon as they find an animal body they go there. Fleas produce 50 eggs a day and these eggs get into the carpets and floorboards and can hatch up to 13 years later ! So there are plenty of fleas to come on to humans too.
they can lay up to 50 eggs per year
a goose can lay 20-50 eggs per season
Chickens lay one egg every 28 hours (on average), so to get an average of two eggs per day you would need two hens. However, if you want to be assured of at least two eggs a day, you should probably have three hens. Also, when hens go through a molt and swap out their feathers, they stop laying eggs until their feathers have grown back in.
You should do it 26 to 50 per day
50 brown eggs 10 white eggs (5 brown eggs x 2 sets per dozen) x (5 boxes) = 50 brown eggs (1 white egg x 2 sets per dozen) x (5 boxes) = 10 white eggs
50 acre-feet per year equates to about 44,630.14 gallons per day.
under lab conditions more then a thousand, in the wild... who knows? much less