If you touch them with your bare hands then no, because the 'mom' will disown them. It's something to do with the scent of us humans. It's okay if you don't touch them with your hands though unless you drop them.
There is not much point as it is probably already too late.
the mother duck will not come back to the nest, and she will leave the egg there. But if it is an abandon nest, nothing will happen. And if you find one laying around no where near a nest that means the mother just left it, or there is no baby duck in there.
" The mother just rejects the baby after she smells and senses that it has be touched by human hands. So, I wouldn't try to. Just let nature take its natural course. "
Actually, this is not true. Birds do NOT have a strong sense of smell and will NOT reject a baby that has been handled.
If the bird has not developed feathers, you should warm it with your hands and place it back into the nest. If the nest has been destroyed, you can create a substitute and attach it to the tree near the original location. A plastic dish with holes punched in the bottom and lined with paper towels seems to be the most common substitute.
If the bird HAS fully developed feathers, you have found a fledgling and are interrupting its learning lessons. :D Leave the fledgling where it is and keep children and pets away.
You can. However, some of them may hatch then die :o. That is because birds prefer to have their own birds in their nest. If they had differentiated that the bird is not their kind, some of them may 'kill' the bird before it learns to fly.
Yes, the mother will not recognize the bird and will either leave it to die or peck it to death......
Keep children and pets away from the baby bird...
no you can not return a duck egg to its nest if you have touched it. once you've touched the egg or gotten near the nest the mother will not return and you've killed all the eggs together
no they will not.
Don't take any of the eggs, or she WONT come back. she might of abandoned her nest, if she doesn't come back, take the eggs at night and warm them up. There is a chance they are still living.
Then the other parent has to take care of the nest.
When people are around, ducks will spend little time on their nest. The duck is more concerned about not having intruders find the eggs, so she is very active to draw their attention away from the nest. However, she usually settles down at night and protects them from the cooler temperatures. I have found that if the duck has been broody for two weeks, and her eggs are infertile, she will abandon the nest, take a break and start again later. The infertile egg does not maintain it's temperature, and even when under the duck all night, it stays cooler than a fertile egg which is generating heat on its own. If it is only one or two "dud" eggs, then the duck will not sit on them, but will push them into the nesting material. That way, if they should become rotten and explode, they will not dirty the good eggs.
25 years
leave them there...if you touch them the parents will leave them. If you have a pet that will hurt them try to keep it on a leash for the time being...it really doesnt take that long for them to leave the nest.
nothing, probably. take it to the vet just in case.
Ducks usually leave the nest just after all the eggs have hatched because the mother bird does not feed the chicks, they have to find food for themselves and to do this best they need to be on water. Thus the mother duck will take them out of the nest and to water immediately.
It depends on the breed, some breed of ducks are more broody than others... There is nothing you can do to make a duck go broody and you can't stop a duck from being broody. When your duck starts to lay eggs don't take them away leave the eggs untouched when there are about 8-12 eggs laid in her nest she might go broody and incubate them until they hatch, while some other ducks will lay their eggs any place like in the middle of the garden, on the pen's floor etc,etc.... A broody duck will make a nest in a well hidden place and lay the eggs there.
All I know is that I take food each day to a nesting duck that I discovered in my yard and I have never seen the Drake.
Yes, touching them wont make the ducklings orphans.
if you don't want chicks hard boil the eggs and give them back to them or simply take the nest off them and if you do want chicks take 2 nests off the pair and then take the nest strait away from them if you do want chicks and they have a nest when they lay the next nest u will ave to separate the chicks from the parents because when they lay the next nest they will literally beat the first chicks to death.