Well I'm not sure but the only thing that I know about dinosaur eggs that they are big and not sure if bird or reptile eggs are big
The animals that produce eggs are called oviparous, which means they lay eggs. Examples include birds, reptiles, amphibians, and various invertebrates like insects.
Birds, reptiles, and insects can lay eggs in a park. Birds such as ducks, geese, and swans often lay eggs in nests, while reptiles like turtles can also lay eggs on land. Insects such as butterflies may lay eggs on plants within the park as well.
Sounds like a reptile to me.
Sure! Some animals that hatch from eggs include birds, reptiles (like snakes and turtles), fish, amphibians (like frogs and salamanders), and some insects (like butterflies and beetles).
internal. horses give birth to live young - they're mammals.
Birds, reptiles and fish lay eggs (although not all fish do). The platypus also lays eggs (it resembles a bird but is actually a mammal). animals like birds, fishes and reptiles lay eggs. These animals are collectively called oviparous animals.
No body knows. Though they have an idea they might be like morden day birds or reptiles
The animals that produce eggs are called oviparous, which means they lay eggs. Examples include birds, reptiles, amphibians, and various invertebrates like insects.
No. In fact, dinosaurs are the ancestors of birds. Mammals separated from reptiles (a large group that still included what would become dinosaurs) about 300 million years ago, and birds evolved during the Jurassic period about 150 million years ago.
They did not carry their eggs. Dinosaurs kept their eggs in nests just like modern birds and reptiles.
Dinosaurs are very related to birds and reptiles. One evidence that dinosaurs are related to birds is the dinosaur named Archeopthyx. At first, I really don't know the spelling of this dinosaur. But this dinosaur has feathers. It has a beak-like mouth and has sharp teeth.
Your question is logically impossible. You must mean, "What prehistoric reptile is not considered by scientists to actually be a dinosaur?" The answer is that there were many mammal-like reptiles that predated the dinosaurs and were not dinosaurs. One example being Dimetrodon, which went extinct millions of years before the first dinosaurs evolved. Dinosaurs were not reptiles, but shared characteristics with both reptiles and birds. They were actually more like birds.
Reptiles and birds have amniotic eggs, as well as the occasional mammal like the platypus and echidna.
Yes, dinosaurs all hatched from eggs. However, we can not tell if any species were ovoviviparous like some modern reptiles.
How do Mammals reproduce? How do fish reproduce? How do Birds reproduce? Sex. Reptiles, like all of the other things I listed. Have sex.
Birds, reptiles, and insects can lay eggs in a park. Birds such as ducks, geese, and swans often lay eggs in nests, while reptiles like turtles can also lay eggs on land. Insects such as butterflies may lay eggs on plants within the park as well.
First of all, you need to know which animals lay eggs. Birds, amphibians, insects, fish, and reptiles all lay their eggs in rainforests. Now, the animals that eat birds eggs include reptiles, primates, rodents, and bigger birds. Amphibian eggs are eaten by fish and fish eggs are eaten by amphibians; sometimes birds and mammals will eat aquatic eggs. Fish will also eat other fishes eggs. Reptile eggs are usually not eaten because the reptiles guard them well. But if they are, it is usually by birds. Insect eggs are eaten by very small vertebrates, like frogs or mice, and most invertebrates, from spiders to woodlice to beetles.