Final answer:
Female pill bugs lay eggs within a specialized pouch and can produce a few dozen to a couple hundred eggs in their lifetime, not thousands per day. Other species, such as roundworms, may produce many thousands of eggs daily. Human females release only one mature egg per month during their reproductive years.
Step-by-step explanation:
The subject of your question pertains to the reproductive capabilities of a female pill bug. It appears there has been some confusion with the information provided, as it does not specifically relate to pill bugs. Nevertheless, using relevant knowledge of biology, I can inform you that female pill bugs (also known as woodlice) lay eggs in a pouch on their underside where the eggs are kept safe until they hatch. These pill bugs can lay anywhere between a few dozen to a couple hundred eggs over their lifetime. However, they do not lay eggs in the quantities you have described, such as 3000 to 20,000 eggs per day, which would be more characteristic of certain parasitic worms or other organisms.
For comparison, other species have different reproductive strategies. For example, roundworms are known to lay a massive number of eggs sometimes reaching 100,000 per day. Ladybug females can lay up to 300 eggs. In stark contrast, human females are born with all the eggs their ovaries will ever contain, but typically only one egg matures and is released each month during their reproductive years.