Yes. A healthy hen will lay up to one egg a day if it is in constant light. If the chicken coop is very dim it will take longer for the hen to lay an egg. It doesn't have to be natural daylight, you can put artificial lights in the chicken coop to increase the amount of eggs the chicken lays.
The following is a hypothesis: "The number of eggs a chicken lays is affected by the hours of daylight." In this hypothesis, the independent variable is the hours of daylight.
No amount of chicken eggs is healthy for humans.
Yes! You can get a chicken to start setting on eggs whether they are her eggs or another chickens or even if they are not chicken eggs. The best way to do this is to make the chicken feel the days have gotten longer, (anywhere from 15 t0 17 hours of daylight.) To do this put a soft light in their hen house and after about a week she begin brooding.
No, chicken eggs are not isolecithal. They are telolecithal because the yolk is located at one end, away from the developing chick. Chicken eggs are also macrolecithal due to the large amount of yolk they possess.
Chickens lay on average 5 to 6 eggs a week, but less in the winter when the daylight is less.
Chickens do not lay "better" eggs according to how much daylight there is - the only thing that changes egg quality are living conditions and the food the chickens eat. However, the more daylight there is, the more eggs a hen should lay.
Hens lay eggs based on the amount of sunlight they receive. They usually begin the process in the early morning when daylight is crowning.
All chicken eggs are contaminated but if you cook them properly and clean the area of where it was put when it was raw it should be fine.
Yes! You can get a chicken to start setting on eggs whether they are her eggs or another chickens or even if they are not chicken eggs. The best way to do this is to make the chicken feel the days have gotten longer, (anywhere from 15 t0 17 hours of daylight.) To do this put a soft light in their hen house and after about a week she begin brooding.
During the winter they don't lay eggs as much because there isn't as much daylight or when they get older they quit laying eggs. I used to have a chicken!
Usually chicken eggs, but quail and ostrich eggs are tasty.
Reconstituted chicken meat and preservatives