The eggs float freely, settling into the coral until hatching.
The eggs should be floating on the surface in ribbons.
The eggs float to the surface and are washed off the coast by the northward current.
They let the eggs float gently to Earth.
A very old egg will actually float in the water and should not be eaten.
After spawning, the eggs float up into the bubble nest, or are carried there, held in the mouth by the male.
These eggs float to the surface after they are released.
The eggs usually float, and tend to accumulate at the edges of the pool.
The eggs then float to the top of the water column and hatch between two and four days.
The fertilized eggs float close to the surface carried by the currents, and hatch in 15 days.