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.
It depends on what type of gecko.
The platypus and the echidna are egg laying mammals. Egg-laying mammals are known as monotremes.
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 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.
Egg-laying mammals, known as monotremes, have a cloaca.
The order Monotremata, or monotremes, are egg-laying mammals.
Egg laying mammals are called monotremes.
Egg-laying mammals are known as "monotremes".