Males will start fertilizing the eggs that come from a female goldfish's body immediately. Once the eggs are released the male will follow up and fertilize them.
If you mean hen's eggs, unfertillised eggs are what are sold in your local supermarket. Fertillised hen's eggs you should be able to get from a local farm.
they puke
if your goldfish id going to get fat if not fatter regardles of how fancyscmansy it is als don't forget you need a guy goldfish to fertilize them
a fancy goldfish leaves the eggs in the stomach for about 3 month's... after that it can take up to 5 months to lay eggs after that.
The female goldfish does develop a chubbier tummy when she has eggs and is ready to spawn. If she does not spawn the eggs are re-absorbed into her body and she gets slimmer again.
Your goldfish will eat a lot more. You would see lots of small white eggs sticking to the aquarium walls and fixtures. The ones that survive hatch into tiny frys. Eggs should be removed as soon as possible because the parent goldfish usually eat them up.
Goldfish do lay eggs. The eggs will attach to something in the tank or bowl until they hatch.
No, goldfish do not stay with their eggs. After spawning, goldfish typically scatter their eggs in the water, and they do not provide any care or protection for the eggs or the resulting fry.
Don't worry!!! Goldfish eat their own eggs!!! If you want the eggs, then you have to separate the mother from the eggs.
If the goldfish eggs appear "fuzzy" then they are growing fungus.
Goldfish are not livebearers so they are never truly prenant. After the female goldfish lays her eggs a nearby male will release a cloud of milt and fertilize the eggs. After this if the mother and father goldfish are not removed from the eggs the eggs will be eaten. So in short a goldfish does not and should not stay with its mother.
This is not something you can tell from the outside of the egg. A trained eye can locate the germinal disk on the top of the yolk once the egg is cracked into a bowl but unless you really know what to look for you will not see it. The best way to know is to ask the farmer where you purchase the eggs from if he keeps a rooster with the flock.