Do mudskippers give birth to live baby?

Mudskippers lay eggs. They belong to the Gobiidae family, a diverse group of fish commonly known as gobies, the largest family of the order Perciformes. Mudskippers are unique in their ability to live both in water and on land, and they have adapted to this lifestyle in a number of ways, including their reproductive strategies. During the breeding season, male mudskippers construct burrows in the mud and compete for females. When a female mudskipper is ready to lay her eggs, she will enter the burrow of a male and deposit the eggs. The male will then fertilize the eggs and guard them until they hatch. The eggs hatch into larvae that live in the water, but as they grow older they develop the ability to breathe air and venture onto land.