i also have a khacki cambell duck,
in my opinion i think it depends on the specific duck. mine is a bit on the "human " side and would never stand to be locked up with a bunch of chickens. i have three other ducks and they all fare well being locked up with the chickens. so i guess im saying that depends on the attitude of the duck.
They are a lightweight breed of duck and the females are wonderful layers.
no but they need a drake for there to be chicks inside the eggs with out a drake they will lay eating eggs
yes they can. just about any kind of duck can breed other kinds of ducks
i have four feamale ducks and two drakes but no eggs why
This answer applies to domestic ducks; No, the occasional aberration occurs and the odd one is born albino, a state of being hatched without pigments of any color. Other species and what is defined as a duck broadens the scope of the answer too far to answer easily.
the ducks hatch in the spring normaly in the 2nd week
Female ducks can still lay eggs without a male duck, the eggs just won't be fertilized, which means...no baby ducks.
Wild ducks certainly do and many farms have ducks that set eggs each spring but there are hatcheries that incubate duck eggs just as most chickens are produced in a hatchery.
Khaki Campbell ducks lay up to 340 eggs a year.
This varies from one breed to another and duck to duck, for example a White Pekin can lay between 100 to 180 eggs per year. Next example, a Khaki Campbell lays 200 to 300 eggs per year!( "A Guide to Better Hatching",Janet Stromberg author)
Yes ducks can lay eggs without mating, the won't be fertile, they need to mate for that and to have baby ducks maybe by artificial insemination? are you asking if they artificially inseminate ducks?
Most Campbells lay their first eggs when 5-7 months old and will average 250-340 eggs of superb texture and flavor per year. As per http://albc-usa.org/cpl/waterfowl/campbell.html
i have four feamale ducks and two drakes but no eggs why
Ducks lay their eggs on a nest, whether it be in a tree or out on the open ground.
Yes. All of my ducks are mongrels :) mine are khaki campbell X abbacot ranger. It does depend on the breed though, as some ducks will prefer to mate with one breed over another. It is all to do with the individual duck's preference. ~BlackWolf1112
This answer applies to domestic ducks; No, the occasional aberration occurs and the odd one is born albino, a state of being hatched without pigments of any color. Other species and what is defined as a duck broadens the scope of the answer too far to answer easily.
ducks are not mamals beacause they lay eggs
No Chickens do not ducks
Ducks are oviparous as they lay eggs.
In eggs