Dragon eggs are often 1 foot tall and 6 inches wide.
Feel free to ask any more dragon questions on my page :)
-Jaga5
no
Komodo Dragons are reptiles, and produce by means of fertilised eggs; sexual reproduction.
yes, they are one of the most protective species of dragons as well. be careful if attempting an egg-extraction facility. good luck if so.
No, Japalura Splendida female dragons require a male to fertilize their eggs. They reproduce sexually, so unfertilized eggs will not develop into offspring.
Leafy and weedy sea dragons have a life cycle that involves courtship, mating, and egg fertilization. The female sea dragon deposits her eggs on the male's tail where they are fertilized and then carried until they hatch. Once the eggs hatch, tiny juvenile sea dragons emerge and begin their independent life in the ocean.
Komodo Dragons' eggs are twice as big as a chicken egg, and weigh about 125g.
Komodo dragons lay their eggs around September.
Yes.
Yes they are - since Bearded dragons lay eggs.
They had eggs and the eggs cracked and a baby dragon was made :P
The female lays eggs then after approx 40-90 days the eggs hatch
Dragons, as you see them in literature and movies, do not exist. But Komodo dragons are a species of lizard, and those still exist today. Komodo dragons lay eggs to reproduce, so those eggs also still exist.
Certain species of birds eat Komodo eggs as well as other Komodo Dragons. Snakes also eat the Dragons eggs as well.
No. Dragons are fictional animals.
no
leathery eggs, 40-60.
The mythical creature known as the dragon is believed to reproduce by laying eggs. This apparently applies to all dragons.