Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Eggs of various animals (mainly birds) Oviparous animals are animals that reproduce by depositing fertilized zygotes outside the body (known as laying or spawning) in metabolically independent incubation organs known as eggs, which nurture the embryo into moving offsprings known as hatchlings with little or no embryonic development within the mother.
In species in which eggs are laid then buried in sand, indentations in the sand can be a clue to imminent hatching. [9] In sea turtles, this usually occurs about 60 days after the laying of eggs, and often at night. [10] However, exposure to xenobiotic compounds, especially endocrine-disrupting compounds, can affect hatchling sex ratios as well ...
A female mallard duck incubates her eggs. Egg incubation is the process by which an egg, of oviparous (egg-laying) animals, develops an embryo within the egg, after the egg's formation and ovipositional release. Egg incubation is done under favorable environmental conditions, possibly by brooding and hatching the egg.
Extremely precocial species are called "superprecocial". Examples are the megapode birds, which have full-flight feathers at hatching and which, in some species, can fly on the same day. [3] Enantiornithes [4] and pterosaurs [citation needed] were also capable of flight soon after hatching.
In animals with high egg mortality, microlecithal eggs are the norm, as in bivalves and marine arthropods. However, the latter are more complex anatomically than e.g. flatworms, and the small microlecithal eggs do not allow full development. Instead, the eggs hatch into larvae, which may be markedly different from the adult animal.
Although they are different from almost all mammals in that they lay eggs, like all mammals, the female monotremes nurse their young with milk. Monotremes have been considered by some authors to be members of Australosphenida , a clade that contains extinct mammals from the Jurassic and Cretaceous of Madagascar, South America, and Australia ...
Image credits: an1malpulse #5. Animal campaigners are calling for a ban on the public sale of fireworks after a baby red panda was thought to have died from stress related to the noise.
The larvae that hatch (called phyllosoma larvae) do not resemble the adults. Instead, they are flat, transparent animals around 14 mm (0.55 in) long, but as thin as a sheet of paper. [ 53 ] The larvae feed on plankton , [ 51 ] and grow through ten molts into ten further larval stages, the last of which is around 30–32 mm (1.2–1.3 in) long ...