Shedding is just a normal part of life for Geckos and laying an egg is too so it's OK.
No. A crocodile is an egg-laying reptile. A platypus is an egg-laying mammal.
The platypus and the echidna are egg laying mammals. Egg-laying mammals are known as monotremes.
It depends on what type of gecko.
There are no egg-laying marsupials. There are, however, two types of mammals which are egg-laying, and they are known as monotremes. Platypuses and echidnas are both monotremes, the only known egg-laying mammals.
The platypus and echidna are recognised as egg-laying mammals. They are monotremes, which are egg-laying mammals.
No. Egg-laying mammals are monotremes.
This is from the "Geico" commercial where the gecko is in the refrigerator looking for his egg salad.
The order Monotremata, or monotremes, are egg-laying mammals.
Egg laying mammals are called monotremes.
Egg-laying mammals, known as monotremes, have a cloaca.
Egg-laying mammals are known as "monotremes".
The life cycle of a gecko begins with an egg being laid by the female. The egg hatches into a baby gecko, which is called a hatchling. The hatchling grows and develops into a juvenile gecko, which eventually matures into an adult gecko. Throughout its life cycle, the gecko goes through stages of growth and development, from egg to hatchling to juvenile to adult.