Oviparous "Aves".
Any egg laying species of the animal kingdom of eukaryotes is "oviparous"
I think all birds are egg laying species!!
Birds belong to the class AVES
2007-01-03 19:03:40
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answer #1
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answered by Som™ 6
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Oviparous animals are animals that lay eggs, with little or no other development within the mother. This is the reproductive method of many fish, amphibians and reptiles, all birds, and most insects and arachnids. The study or collecting of eggs, particularly bird eggs, is called oology.
2007-01-03 19:56:18
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answer #2
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answered by FARIDA H 2
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the answer for a specific english name is OVIPAROUS animals. this is the correct term given to egg laying animals.iam very sure eith this answer. But i want to clarify one thing first. all birds will lay eggs. there is nothing called egg laying birds. thus, the animals or birds which lay eggs are called us oviparous.
2007-01-03 20:53:49
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answer #3
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answered by krithika R 1
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I'm not very sure of the question asked here so I'm giving you two answers from what I comprehend from your question:
Factually, all birds are Oviparous Vertebrates.
1) The Latin name for a bird is "Avis" and birds are put into the Vertebrate Class - "Aves" in the Animal Kingdom. ie: Animalia(kingdom) - Chordata(phylum) - Vertebrata(subphylum) - Archosauria(unranked) - Aves(Class)
The Latin Word Avis in English is translated as Birds.
2) Birds are classified into categories (not taxonomically) as per their funtions to humans.
According to this, Egg layers would fall in the category of Poultry or Fowl as they produce eggs for human consumption, therefore the specific word in English in this aspect would be "Poultry".
2007-01-03 20:25:26
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answer #4
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answered by Saveena 1
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All birds lay eggs - I don't see why you would need a special word for it.
2007-01-04 05:09:36
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answer #5
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answered by Queen of Cards 4
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first of all, all birds lay eggs, but you could use the term "birds", or formal name of the class, "aves"
2007-01-04 13:41:49
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answer #6
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answered by comic book guy 2
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There isn't an "English" word. We all - US and other English speakers - use the Latin 'oviparous' - "egg-laying".
And the organ for 'doing the deed', although you didn't ask, is an 'ovipositor' - "egg-dropper"!
2007-01-03 19:16:15
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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"Bakku-Shan" = eastern. it incredibly is a word to describe a woman it quite is warm from the back, and intensely grotesque on the front. "Mamihlapinatapai" = Yaghan. it incredibly is a glance between 2 those that shows an unstated, shared desire. "Backpfeifengesicht" = German. it incredibly is a word to describe a face that must be punched. "Nunchi" = Korean. The act of no longer starting to be a Backpfeifengesicht. "Shlimazl" = Yiddish. somebody who has no longer something yet undesirable success. "Tingo" = Pacuense. To borrow from a pal till he/she has no longer something left. "Kummerspeck" = German. the surplus weight gained from emotional ingesting. "Shemomedjamo" = Georgian. To devour previous the factor of being complete purely because of the fact the foodstuff tastes reliable. "Hikikomori" = eastern. somebody who has withdrawn from social life. "Gadrii Nombor Shulen Jongu" = Tibetan. Giving an answer unrelated to the question. "Iktsuarpok" = Inuit. to pass outdoors to envision for predicted travelers; persistently returned. "Kaelling" = Danish. an unsightly, depressing lady who yells obscenities at her young ones. "Neidbau" = German. A development (frequently of little or no fee to the owner) built with the only purpose of harassing or inconveniencing his neighbor in some way. "Pochemuchka" = Russian. someone who asks to many questions. "Pilkunnussija" = Finnish. someone who believes it incredibly is their destiny to stamp out all spelling and punctuation errors on the fee of attractiveness, vanity and psychological nicely being.
2016-10-29 23:13:18
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answer #8
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answered by ? 4
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Oviparous.
2007-01-03 19:03:43
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answer #9
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answered by ignoramus 7
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oology isthe study of eggs
2007-01-03 19:04:05
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answer #10
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answered by ARUN G 1
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