You can take a broom and shoo it away
Nope.
The conflict in the short story "Aunt Suzie's Rooster" is between Aunt Suzie, who loves her rooster and wants to keep him, and the narrator's father, who sees the rooster as a nuisance and wants to get rid of him. The conflict is mainly due to the rooster's loud and disruptive crowing, which disturbs the narrator's father's sleep and annoys him. Aunt Suzie tries to persuade her brother (the narrator's father) to let her keep the rooster because it reminds her of her deceased husband, but the father insists that the rooster must go. The conflict is resolved when the narrator's father and brother secretly take the rooster away and give it to a neighbor who wants it. Aunt Suzie is upset at first but eventually comes to accept the loss of her beloved rooster.
No. Roosters crow when they see light, it's instinctive.
No, he will not hurt his chicks in any way and will defend them like my rooster does.
The rooster crows to communicate with other roosters, establish territory, and announce the start of a new day.
He sleeps in a nest or a cage it depends on where you keep him.
If you have hens, and a rooster, no matter what you will have babies. You can keep them in a separate pen, and it won't happen. Or, you could fix the rooster, but then it won't be a rooster any more. It's logic.
If your brood hen seems to be having no trouble keeping the other hens away, she should be fine where she is.
A good ratio is 1 rooster for every 15 hens. Many farms keep more hens than that and only one rooster, but that keeps him very busy.
YES
To get non-fertile eggs you need to keep the hen and rooster separated, or get rid of your rooster all together.
Only if you want to hatch chicks. Then, no you don't have to.