Bacteria and other tiny cells
merely divide in two to reproduce, but more complex creatures need more
complex means of reproduction. Animals use eggs in one form or other;
however, most are not very similar to
the familiar breakfast food many of us enjoy. Animal eggs are as
different and varied in their structure as the animals who made them.
Octopus Eggs
Octopuses string their soft,
translucent eggs up on overhangs of rock or coral. The females lay
hundreds of thousands of eggs at a time and will stay to guard them
against hungry predators until they hatch. This often takes so long that
she begins to starve and some octopuses will eat their own arms to
survive. Once her thousands of tiny offspring are hatched, they feed on
microscopic organisms like plankton until they grow
large enough to live on the sea floor as adults. The mother, often
disabled, will generally be eaten by a predator once she leaves her lair
because she has grown too weak to defend herself.
Fish Eggs
Unlike sharks and octopuses, most
fish do not have sex. The female lays or releases unfertilized eggs and
the male injects them with sperm. In some species, the male and female
might never even meet each other. Although some fish, like the octopus,
will stay to protect the eggs, most have nothing more to do with them
and leave them to develop on their own. Millions of soft eggs are laid
at once, so even hungry predators will not destroy all of them before
they hatch. Some eggs are laid on secure surfaces like rocks whereas
others drift freely in the water, sometimes for up to hundreds of
kilometers. Free-floating eggs are called ichthyoplankton and some are
able to swim even before they hatch.
Bird Eggs
Female birds and most reptiles
lay internally fertilized eggs and most will protect them until they
hatch, often in a specially-constructed nest. Even after hatching, the
offspring are often helpless and require still more care. Bird egg
shells are made from calcium carbonate, which is also the major
component of sea shells and
pearls. For camouflage, some egg shells are colored or patterned with
various other chemicals. Eggs often are slightly pinched at one end due
to compression they experience inside their mother. This is useful for
many birds as it makes the eggs roll around in a circle rather than
irretrievably away. Many birds keep their eggs warm by sitting on them. A
few birds sneakily lay their eggs in other birds’ nests so that the
egg’s unwitting foster parents will put in the work instead. Some birds,
such as hens, will lay unfertilized eggs which are a large food source
for humans.
Dinosaur Eggs
Dinosaur eggs sometimes contain fossilized baby dinosaurs inside, and offer a fantastic look into the past. Dinosaur eggs have many shapes. Some are elongated spheres, similar to
many modern medical tablets. Others are teardrops, and still more are
spherical. Some dinosaurs laid many eggs in a nest and protected them
while others laid eggs indiscriminately before abandoning them. There
are many types of dinosaur eggs, and only some have a similar shell to
modern bird or reptile eggs. They
can be much larger than the eggs of any extant animal, with the largest
being over 60cm long and 20cm wide. Even this is much smaller than the
full adult size of many dinosaurs, due to the nature of eggs limiting
their size. Eggshells contain tiny pores to allow gases into the embryo
inside. An egg that is too large needs a thicker shell to support its
own weight, which prevents the pores from allowing the embryo to breathe.
Sponge and Jelly Eggs
Sponges, jellies, and corals
produce eggs in a similar way to most fish. They do not have males and
females. Instead, simple male and female organs both occur on a single
creature, which release eggs and sperm into the water. Some reproduce
asexually, without even the male and female organs, by simply releasing
some of their cells to grow directly into new individuals without
needing to be fertilized. Some sponges and jellies can reproduce if they
are broken up into pieces, where each piece broken off them grows into a
new individual. In some species of sponges, if you were to slice one up
finely and spread out the fragments, they would merge back together and
reform. If you spread them out far enough, each fragment would simply
grow into a new sponge.
Insect Eggs
Female insects often store sperm from a single mating to use for every subsequent fertilization, so many males die after their only mating. Insects
will lay many eggs at once, and sometimes construct extravagant nests
or nurseries for them. The eggs themselves can be stunningly shaped or
camouflaged. Some eggs are laid in water and the newborn insects are adapted to spending the first portion of their life aquatically before emerging into the air. Many insects will care for their eggs after they are laid, with some ants and termites even controlling the humidity and pH for them.
Amphibian Eggs
Most amphibians begin the first parts of their lives
in water but as adults live on land. Their eggs are therefore often
laid in water, surrounded by a gel to keep them all together. When they
hatch, the offspring are called ‘tadpoles’ and have gills but no legs.
They swim around like fish, although initially they also lack a mouth
and live directly off the yolk left over from their egg by absorbing it
through their skin. Eventually, tadpoles grow mouths, legs, lungs, lose
their tail, and become fully adult. Some frogs carry their eggs about to
protect them or if there is not enough water around. A small number of
amphibians become tadpoles and grow into tiny adults before they even
hatch, so they do not need to live in the water at all.
Monotreme Eggs
Monotremes are thought to have evolved from reptiles
and were the ancestors of modern mammals. The only living monotremes
today are platypuses and echidnas. They are warm-blooded, have hair, and
produce milk, so they are mammals. However, not like other mammals,
they lay eggs. Unlike most birds and reptiles, while the egg is still inside a mother monotreme, she supplies it with a small amount of nutrition from her own body, similar to
other mammals. Monotreme eggs are small, white, and spherical. They are
laid in small numbers and are fastidiously cared for by their mother in
her burrow until 4 to 6 months after hatching. Platypuses keep their
eggs warm by curling their tail over them whereas echidnas warm them by
tucking them in a small fold of skin across their stomachs. Monotremes
do not have nipples to produce milk from, so instead they sweat milk
which their newly-hatched young drink.
Vivipary
Vivipary is giving birth
to live young. Sometimes, true eggs are still created but are kept
inside the mother’s body until they hatch and the infants emerge. This
occurs in relatively few species of snakes, fish, cockroaches,
scorpions, and various other animals. In seahorses, the eggs are
transferred from the female to the male, and he carries them until they
hatch. In mammals, the egg shells do not form at all, and the embryo is
developed directly inside the mother, who provides it with nutrients
from her body via a placenta except in marsupials, where the infant is born while still an embryo and nursed in a pouch. Vivipary requires much more energy
from the mother than oviparity (egg-laying), but it allows longer and
finer development which is restricted by eggs and so more complex
offspring are possible. Vivipary leads naturally to parental involvement
by teaching their offspring, allowing still more complex and
specifically-adapted behavior to be learned. Oviparous animals are
mostly born with all the knowledge and skills they need genetically
wired into them, but a mammal can be taught. To varying extents, a
mammal can therefore learn to live in a much greater range of environments than can a single species of oviparous animal.
Shark Eggs
Most sharks and skates lay
strangely shaped eggs sometimes called a ‘mermaid’s purse.’ These
consist of an egg case in a thin capsule made of collagen. They often
are square or rectangular with stringy or pointy corner horns, but can
come in a variety of odd shapes. A few sharks, such as the Port Jackson
shark, have helical egg cases which are secured into the sand like drill
bits. Shark eggs can wash up on the beach and are often hand-sized,
although the largest recorded was over 2m long. Female sharks lay
fertilized eggs onto the sea floor where they stay until they hatch, not
needing any more attention from their mother. Some shark eggs contain
several baby sharks which cannibalize each other before hatching to
ensure that only the strongest baby survives.
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