How do ticks lay eggs?
Ticks lay eggs just like most insects: oviposition of fertilized eggs. If you are wondering about hard ticks (for example, deer ticks, or hard ticks (Ixodidae is the family), then your in terms of location is in the leaf litter of forests (i.e. on the ground). They do not lay them on animals usually as far as I know, and definitely not IN animals. Once these eggs hatch, they begin their triphasic life cycle, taking usually one year for each phase (larval, nymphal, and adult phase). They feed once per life cycle, then drop to the ground from their host and overwinter, until the next spring and phase comes. The exception here is the adult phase; once they have fed as an adult (generally only female adults will feed, the males seek a host but use it really as a method to find a female to fertilize rather than to eat), they drop to the ground and immediately die (males) or lay their eggs (female). As adults, the females’ last meal is usually really significant, causing them to swell to a s