Most likely a rodent of some kind, either mouse, rat or chipmunk.
No, chicken eggs are not isolecithal. They are telolecithal because the yolk is located at one end, away from the developing chick. Chicken eggs are also macrolecithal due to the large amount of yolk they possess.
Yes, bird's eggs will always have a yolk, for example, the eggs that we eat has a yolk and the chicken that layed the egg is not mated.
The benefit of eating peahen eggs over chicken eggs are that they are larger so you get more egg, they are richer in flavor, and you get more nutrients.
Mammals, birds, and reptiles lay amniotic eggs, so, yes, a chicken lays amniotic eggs. Amniotic eggs contain a yolk and aid in gas and energy exchange.
The yolk in an egg is the food for the developing embryo, with the white (or albumen) surrounding it acting to support and protect it from the outside environment. Your average store-bought eggs are unfertilized, so the embryo has not developed and is typically not visible.
It is not good if your chicken is eating its own eggs but it should not effect the taste of the meat or eggs. If your chicken is eating its eggs the only way to stop it is to check for eggs more often and try to make sure you pick up the eggs as soon as possible.
Fish develop from eggs that contain a yolk. The yolk (like the yolk of a chicken egg) provides the fish embryo with all the food energy it needs to grow until it hatches.
No. The egg won't be fertilized and it will be a yolk. But then again, if you want scrambled eggs, then i guess you can have it without the rooster.
All eggs have yolk. Fertilized eggs will have a little white circle on the yolk. Unfertilized eggs will have an oval instead of a circle on the yolk.
Eating, producing eggs, having as pets,
As long as the yolk isn't broken, and you boil them(avoid frying and scrambling). 4 eggs a day is fine
It makes them lay darker yoked eggs.