No. However, shell color typically fades with the length of the laying cycle.
People don't really eat platypus eggs- so maybe chickens eggs have more nutrition? Also platypus eggs are only about the size of a grape so a chicken egg would probably have more nutrition because it is larger.
you can't tell the color of eggs by the color of a chicken's tail. with the exception of auracanas and americaunas (they lay green-blue eggs) you tell by the color of a chicken's earlobe. if it is white it lays white eggs...if it is red it lays a shade of brown eggs.
Something that was nearly a chicken. The way natural selection works, is through gradual change due to mutations in reproduction, so the parent of the first chicken eggs wasn't a chicken, but a bird that was almost a chicken that laid mutated eggs.
You might install a light in your coop, increase the nutrition of your feed, and reduce the stress/boredom of the birds to encourage better laying.
Any chicken can. I have two leghorns, one lays teardrop shaped eggs, and the other one lays ostrich eggs!!!! (Not literally. But you get the picture.) But some breeds are bred to lay huge eggs. Bull*hit! hormones.. natural chicken lay 1/2 the size of eggs u see in the supermarket, u just happened to come across bigger egggs treated with more hormones, go to an organic strore and believe me.
Usually chicken eggs, but quail and ostrich eggs are tasty.
No, you do not need eggs to fry chicken.
No. A chicken is a bird. No marsupial lays eggs.
egg of chicken
Chicken eggs do freeze in the shell. Freezing will cause the egg to expand and crack open. Frozen eggs in the shell change consistency and will not cook, taste or have the same texture as a fresh egg. Special preparation before freezing will render the eggs useable when they need to be frozen.
Eggs and Chicken.
Salmonella can be found in both chicken and eggs, although the incidence is more rare in eggs.