Some breeds can lay eggs of variable color. Chickens that lay white eggs will not suddenly lay brown eggs or vis versa. Easter egger chickens and Araucana hens can lay variable shades of blue/green.
there are all diffrent colors brown ones black ones white, grey, gold(yellow) multie colored, speckled they are lots of possible colors of chickens
We have the color Yellow,Red,and Green . Also sometimes there is a mixture of 2 or all three of those colors,
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the color of the egg does not depend on the color of the chicken, it depends on the breed. so your chickens fine. the color of the egg does not depend on the color of the chicken, it depends on the breed. so your chickens fine.
NO, the color is only a surface coating and will not effect the contents of the egg.
yes
i think the egg came first you don't necessarily need a chicken to have an egg it could be a hybrid egg that would hatch to be a chicken thus the egg is first
A bit smaller than a chicken egg and the top of the egg comes to a bit more of a point
White
The egg as such probably isn't much different. But the chicken that laid the free range egg has probably led a happier, more natural Life than a battery chicken.
Most duck eggs are larger than a chicken egg. PoultryTalk's Response: Smell the egg, duck eggs have a scent chicken eggs dont. Also most are glossy and sometimes they are a greenish color. Also duck eggs are usually thicker.
umm... i kinda' understand the question, so i am gonna fo my best 2 answer it correctly. a white egg comes from a white chicken while a brown egg comes from brown chickens, what ever the chickens' color is, that's is the color of the egg.
a chicken egg is smaller than a ostrich egg and a ostrich egg is the biggest egg known to man
No. Eggs are nothing more than an undeveloped chicken. Wheat is a grass.
A hen can only lay one egg at a time, however, they can have a clutch (nest) of up to a dozen or more.