They can mate and then the female can lay the eggs.
Between a few thousand and several tens of thousands, according to the size of the female. The bigger the female is, the more eggs it lays. However, the survival rate is very low. Of 10,000 larvae, approximately only one will become an adult lobster.
Yes they are birds so they lay eggs.
Yes, all birds lay eggs, that includes the sparrow.
they can lay 4 to 6 eggs
robins lay blue spotty eggs but some egsotic birds can lay them to
The female crab lays the eggs, and not the male.
No; only the female can lay eggs, as with all vertebrate species which lay eggs. The female platypus lays the egg and incubates it. The male has nothing to do with the young.
Yes female Angle can lay their eggs without a male. But the eggs will not be fertile.
No, the male flies do not lay eggs. Female flies are larger than male flies. The female flies lay over 900,000 eggs during their lifespan.
Female birds do not need male birds to lay eggs, they need them to lay fertile eggs.
The female turtle will lay the eggs and the male comes along and fertilizes them. The female turtle will lay eggs even if there is no male turtle around.
She does not lay eggs and she can not have nymphs without a male
no but a female does
A male stick insect will not lay eggs. However, a female stick insect is parthenogenetically, and can lay eggs without mating with a male.
the female cant lay egg without the male
when the seahorses are mating the female seahorse puts about 1500 eggs into the male seahorses pouch. The male seahorse carries the eggs for 4 to 45 days and then releases the seahorses into the water and leaves them.
No, the female cannot lay eggs without a male, unless they have mated before hand and the female is willing to continue laying the eggs.