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Incubators are used in Biology, hospitals, and agriculture for hatching eggs. An incubator has a thermostat that is turned on to a specific temperature and when the temperature goes below the set temperature, the heating element comes on.
It is cooler
No. It't the same as hatching chicken eggs.
incubator
When hatching eggs, there are two methods of hatching - 1) You incubate them in a incubator. 2) You let the mother set them.
If you have obtained fertilized eggs, they can be sucessfully incubated, but the chicks MUST be kept warm after hatching. Recommended temperature after hatching is 95-99 degrees F the first week and decrease by 5 degrees each week.
uh... no one! unless a hen.... yah. But, ya, you need somthing like an incubator for the eggs to hatch corectly. Post a message!
Try to keep the temperature between 99 and 102 degree F. 100 F is the best. Also humidity is as important. Keep water inside the incubator and keep the humidity at 60 percent. Moisture is important. Find a remote temperature sensor and put the read out where you can see it. The eggs will begin to generate heat as they get closer to hatching, and the temperature may climb in the incubator.
The temperature is 90 degrees Fahrenheit
egg temperature for cardinal
A chicken can be hatched from under the mother hen after 21 days of sitting on them, as long as the eggs are turned for the first 18 days, twice a day (morning and night). But, I think you are referring to an incubator, where you put fertilized eggs at a certain temperature, and turn them just as a mother hen would do. I have put a lot of eggs in my incubator, and most of them hatched, so you've got a good chance to hatching most eggs.
Eggs should be maintained at between 99.5 and 100.5 degrees Fahrenheit with a minimum of 50% humidity. The temperature can go as high as 101 but this will effect the hatch rate. Prolonged periods of cooler temps below 99.5 will cause delay in hatching.