Yes. Please do. Poor chicken.
If they were found on the chicken immediately after cooking and while it was still warm, the maggots probably came from somewhere else and not the cooked chicken. Fly eggs can hatch within 24 hours of laying. If the chicken was left out to cool, a fly could have laid eggs on it then.
Yes, maggots can grow in chicken manure. When I kept chickens in too small of a space, even scooping weekly, I found tons of maggots. I would let the chickens in and they would actually eat them!
Chicken nesting boxes are usually wooden boxes with some sort of soft padding that chickens like to roost in. If they don't have nesting boxes they will make nests all over the place in the grass.
A chicken is not a decomposer. Bacteria, fungi, earthworms, fly maggots and other very small things are decomposers.
Dance around singing ? IF the chicken isn't nesting, then looks like you have breakfast for the next few days. if the chicken IS nesting....looks like your going to have (maybe- if they all make it) 12 more chicks running around.
Nobody really knows why the chicken crossed the road. There is only nesting space for one more chicken in the henhouse.
no !!!!! it will pock the hen
Eating maggots is harmless so long as they are clean maggots. this is achieved by placing the maggots in a tub of bran which they eat cleaning there internal organs. In some countries an cultures maggots are considered a delicacy.
You will find tons of nesting boxes at B&Q. I think they don't sell type of boxes these But I'm not really sure if they sell nesting boxes only for chicken.
Typically you could do both.
They can clean some infected wounds by eating all the dead flesh.
Its because they are ugly