Simply, The queen in a colony lays the eggs. But a colony is likely to have more than one queen laying eggs.
Yes, more than one, in fact.
The Rhode Island Red lays the largest eggs, on average, than any other breed. They are also the most prolific layer of brown eggs with an average lay of 5/week. The Leg Horn also lays an average of 5/week and has large eggs, just not as large as the Rhode Island Red.
No. Only female cockroaches lay eggs. There is no male insect of any kind which lays the eggs. A female cockroach will lay anywhere between 10 and 40 eggs in a batch, and a total of around 30 batches of eggs during her lifetime.
Guppies don't lay eggs. They are livebearers.
The ostrich lays the biggest but most dinosaurs laid bigger eggs than that.
Female piranha lays an average of 5,000 eggs. Both male and female piranha defend their protected eggs that on average more than 905 will survive.
They breed with their mate than the female lays eggs
Caterpillars do not have babies the way many animals do. In fact, caterpillars are really babies themselves, because they are the larval form of butterflies and moths. The adult insect lays many eggs at one, sometimes hundreds of them, and these eventually hatch out into caterpillars.
more than a billion because 1 mother fish lays thousands of eggs 1 time
No. The PeaCOCK is the male of the species of bird called PEAFOWL. Not surprisingly, it is the female of the species, PeaHEN, which lays the eggs. The eggs are a bit bigger in size than a chicken's egg.
The dutch bantam lays more than an average large fowl. (At 270 a year plus.) But is still one of the smallest. The rhode island red bantam is large, so should lay large eggs.