According to North Carolina's agricultural department,
"Turkey breeders start to lay eggs for hatching at 32 weeks of age. They are artificially inseminated each week during their egg production period which is approximately 25-30 weeks."
Yes, female turkeys lay eggs. Turkeys are considered a fowl, which is a bird, and all birds lay eggs.
No, only females do.
Turkeys lay eggs.
Turkeys do lay 8 to 15 eggs, but not in tree nests. They lay their eggs in shallow holes scooped out of the ground.
Yes, but they wont be fertile. Hen turkeys lay eggs in the spring with or without the tom.
Birds do not have periods. They lay eggs.
"No. Turkeys can't fly." Wrong answer....turkeys DO fly. They will not lay eggs in a nest in a tree however. They make nests on the ground in thick cover and that is where they lay their eggs. Hope that helps.
Turkeys begin to lay their eggs during the spring. They only lay eggs once a year and it's rare that they lay eggs in the fall.
Turkeys do not lay eggs - they're male.
Most hens (female turkeys) lay a clutch of 12-14 eggs per spring. If a nest is destroyed by a predator, the hen will get bred again, and then lay another clutch of 12-14 eggs.
Females lay the eggs. Che
in a nest! by the way you spelt dose wrong
Turkey's are ground nesting birds. So, in the woods (not usually open fields or hedges) they will scratch together a "nest" of leaves and lay a few eggs. They have been known to lay non-fertile eggs to distract predators from the real nest.
They actually lay 40 eggs at once, if which consumed all together tastes of chocholate chupips