an egg a day
3 to 4 at a time
one at a time
Sometimes, she will usually wait to sit when there are many eggs.
Accorsing to the staff trainers at my company... an ostrich egg is the equivalent to 18 chicken eggs.
about 2 eggs.
This is a three-part answer: 1. An average is around 3-4 in one setting. 2. (silly) As many as they want to lay 3. The number of eggs a hen will lay at one time, depends on how many of her eggs are fertilized during reproduction. Hope this helps =)
Yes. they both do. But their eggs are very different. While the hen's eggs have a hard outside the frogs eggs are very soft. Also a hen doesn't lay nearly as many eggs as a frog. Also frogs eggs are in the water, while a hen lays them on land.
The egg, obviously. This is evident because early dinosaurs laid eggs, while MILLIONS of years later, a type of dinosaur evolved into the hen. There also will have been insects and reptiles a long time before the hen evolved, and those laid eggs also. I believe that this is solid proof that the egg came before the hen.
There are many factors as to how many eggs a hen will lay. * How old the hen is (The younger, the more she will lay) * What breed is the hen? (Certain breeds lay MUCH more than others) * What time of year is it? * The amount of actual day time (the three last are VERY important factors! the more sunlight, the more eggs. The better the weather/season, the more eggs. The most eggs are laid in the summertime.) * What is in her diet? (The better diet she has, the more eggs her body can produce.) Those are the highpoints, as well as what will affect them most.
200
lifetime
12