No, they carry on laying more.
They share the characteristics of all birds, feathers, warm blood, laying of eggs.
There's a terminology problem here. Birds, including blue jays, lay eggs. The eggs are then incubated until the young birds hatch from them. If you consider "hatching" to be the same as "being born", then no, the incubation has already taken place. If you consider "born" to correspond more to the egg laying part, then yes, the eggs are incubated after being laid.
chickens lay an egg approximately every 24 hoursAns2. Domestic chickens have been selectively bred to varieties that produce an egg each day. This is not their native behaviour.
you can die while doing it but that wont kill only if you have a big throat
the birds will die
a nest
Birds are winged, bipedal, warm-blooded, feathered, egg-laying, vertebrate animals.
An egg laying organism, most likely a type of fish, birds, raptiles, or amphibians
Yes. Owls are birds, and birds reproduce by laying eggs.
Yes. Penguins are birds, therefore they lay eggs.
Animals are not classified on basis of egg laying .
I can't name all specifically but I can do it broadly, fish, some sharks, platypuses, and birds.
not unless she keeps on laying eggs. then she might die
There is no such thing. Mammals are one classification, and birds are another. All birds lay eggs. The platypus and the echidna are the only egg-laying mammals.
A normal egg is NOT oily.
some birds like common terns this can be between 5-10 days
Birds are not mammals. They are in their own category, which is "Birds". The only two egg-laying mammals are the platypus and the echidna, which are classified as monotremes.