Yes, their egg sacs contain hundreds of eggs. Before they lay their eggs they will eat the male (go figure). Then, after they lay their eggs they will die.
They don't. They lay their eggs in sand. What you heard was a myth.
Yes, all spiders lay eggs. They typically produce silk egg sacs to protect their eggs until they hatch. Each sac can contain hundreds of eggs, depending on the species of spider.
The number of eggs a spider lays varies depending on the species. Some spiders may lay only a few dozen eggs, while others can lay hundreds or even thousands of eggs at a time.
Spiders do not give birth. They lay eggs. Typically they lay their eggs in a silken sac of some kind that is sealed until the spiders start to hatch. The silken sac is carried around by some spiders such as the wolf spiders, or may be hung in or near to the spider's web. Different spiders have different places to keep their egg sacs safe.
No, spiders do not lay eggs in human skin. Spiders typically lay their eggs in a safe and secluded location, such as a web or a burrow, where they can protect and care for their offspring.
Fish typically lay the most eggs compared to frogs and spiders. Some fish species can lay thousands to millions of eggs at once, while frogs and spiders typically lay smaller clutches of eggs.
....No.
spiders and grasshoppers both do.
Spiders lay eggs anywhere it's safe for them, not just a human host.
Spiders lay eggs which then hatch into little spiders.
Yes, their egg sacs contain hundreds of eggs. Before they lay their eggs they will eat the male (go figure). Then, after they lay their eggs they will die.
They don't. They lay their eggs in sand. What you heard was a myth.
No they don't.
Unknown
no
it depends how they do it