The usual number of eggs laid is four, but on one occasion, near the Quinine Laboratory in the Government Gardens at Ooty, I procured six from one nest.
The normal number of eggs laid appears to be four.
Four is the usual number of eggs laid, but five are often found, and the fifth I expect is frequently that of H.
Four is the normal number of eggs laid, but I often have found five, and on two occasions six.
It has, however, been stated that caterpillars hatching from eggs laid in August, attain the size of the slow-growing contingent from May eggs, and then hibernate.
Eggs laid on ground in woods, usually under fallen logs or at the bases of trees; buffy, sparsely spotted with brown (2.
Eggs laid on the ground, usually under low, spreading branches of spruces; bright buff with bold black blotches (1.
On the ground near water; thickly lined with downy feathers; eggs laid in June.
Eggs laid on the ground under any suitable cover; creamy-white, handsomely blotched with brown.
The North-American naturalists have taught us lately that honey is not always the diet of the Blister-beetles: some Meloidæ in the United States devour the packets of eggs laid by the Grasshoppers.
The number of eggs laid in a single batch is really prodigious.
The relation of plastral length to number of eggs laid by 21 females of T.
Once they are ovulated, the eggs are exposed to but few hazards until laid; counts of corpora lutea are an accurate indication of the number of eggs laid.
Breckenridge recorded 17 eggs laid in six minutes, Cahn recorded 12 eggs laid in eight minutes, and Hamilton recorded four eggs laid in three minutes.
Eggs laid in northern latitudes are slightly smaller than those laid farther south.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "eggs laid" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.