0 (of an animal) giving birth to live babies which have developed inside the mother’s body rather producing eggs from the body. -- đẻ con
The females of many viviparous species develop a placenta with which to provide the growing embryo with nutrients.
Reproduction is aplacental viviparous, with the females supplying their unborn young with histotroph (uterine milk).
It is presumably aplacental viviparous like other members of its family.
It is characterised by calyces with 8-16 lanceolate, pointed lobes, 16-32 stamens, explosive release of pollen, and viviparous propagules.
Reproduction is presumably aplacental viviparous like in other stingrays, with the developing embryos sustained by maternally produced histotroph (uterine milk).
Unusual among the ground sharks, the false catshark is viviparous with the developing embryos practicing intrauterine oophagy.
Like other requiem sharks, it is viviparous, with the developing embryos mainly nourished through a placental connection formed from the depleted yolk sac.
The reproductive biology of the onefin electric ray has not been documented; presumably it is viviparous like other electric rays.