10 inches
It depends entirely on the species of fish. They are pretty small, but vary from the size of a pin head to something the size of a pea. There are probably bigger ones for some of the bigger fish.
There are over 500 different types of tardigrades, and they range in size from 1.5 mm down to 0.1 mm, which is roughly 1/3 the size of the period at the end of this sentence.
It's called the germinal disc or blastodisc - a small, circular, white spot (2-3 mm across) on the surface of the yolk; it is where the sperm enters the egg. The nucleus of the egg is in the blastodisc.
If you have ever seen an ant before, the answer is very simple.Ant sizes vary depending on what kind they are. They grow upwards of 1 inch long.The normal ants and termites are in the 3 to 15 mm range. But the carpenter ant can grow to 25 mm (more than an inch) in length, and the largest prehistoric ants were up to 3 times that size.
Yes, most species produce fairly large eggs, being 1,5 tot 3 millimeter in diameter. The eggs have a protective gelatinous outer layer of 5-10 mm. Eggs of the species Xenopus laevisare so large they are studies in laboratories all over the world.
4 mm in diameter
a fish egg is very small perhaps 1or 2 mm!
They have a diameter of around 1 mm.
Laughing kookaburras' eggs are 46mm x 35 mm.
Platypus eggs are just a couple of centimetres in size - about the size of a grape. They average 11 mm in diameter. They are small, smooth and leathery, unlike birds' eggs, which are hard-shelled. They weigh just a few grams.
The diameter of a human egg cell is typically around 0.1 millimeters, which is roughly the size of a grain of sand.
A pocket watch with a 47 mm diameter is about the size of a large egg or a small lemon. It will fit comfortably in the palm of your hand and its size makes it easily portable in a pocket.
. mm..... yes
Laughing kookaburras' eggs and the Blue-winged kookaburras' eggs are about 46mm x 35 mm, or the size of a chicken's egg. The Spangled kookaburra, a smaller species, lays eggs around the size of a bantam chicken's eggs.
An unfertilized egg in a human body is typically around 0.1 mm in diameter, which is roughly the size of a grain of sand.
The size of an egg, or oocyte, is not the sole determinant of its ability to conceive. A mature egg typically measures around 18-24 mm in diameter, so a 19 mm egg is generally considered mature and capable of being fertilized. However, successful conception also depends on factors such as sperm quality, timing of ovulation, and overall reproductive health.
The two egg-laying mammals, or monotremes, the platypus and the echidna, lay very small, white eggs. These eggs are around the size of grapes, and have leathery shells. The platypus's egg averages 11 mm in diameter, and they are rounder than the echidna's egg. The echidna's egg ranges between 13 and 15 mm in length.