well, you have to make an incubator to keep it warm... don't keep it under a light tht is over 90 degrees, or you're egg is DONE. you cant keep it outside, or under a blanket it wont help. (if you touch one egg you must keep all the eggs.)
It must be really hot, you may put the egg under 2 soft pillows, or cover it with a handkerchief and put it under a lamp.
75 degrees 75 degrees 75 degrees
cuddeled in her feet
37.5C
Incubation period is 18 days. If she sits on more than 8 or so, she may not be able to keep all of them warm.
you can keep them alive by putting them on heating pads and rolling the egg 3 times a day.
in a blanket
Yes it is, You can actually keep the eggs away forever as long as you take care of them and teach them because that's what their mother would do, But if you just keep the eggs away from the mother till the day before they hatch you won't have to take care of them Thanx 4 ur Question :)
Penguin baby eggs are kept warm by the father while the mother looks more food
Yes, they will, but not often. I have raised both Bobwhite and Coturnix Quail for years and never have the Coturnix sat and hatched their own eggs. However, I have had bobwhite hatch their own. This year I had a hen sit on 17 eggs and hatched 14. I found it very interested to see the morning after that the male helped her sit and keep the young warm, just siting side by side in the same nest.
The answer is quite simple. The eggs are her children and they belong to her...much the way a human mother protects her children.
If you want. There is incubators you can keep duck eggs in to incubate. If you want the ducks to grow up to know there mother and father and your willing to take the risks that could harm your ducks, you can let them stay with the mother. Remember that the parents arnt always around to keep the eggs warm in the winter. They tend to go out looking for food and water.
they dont
This means the eggs of an animal are kept warm by the mother until the young animal or bird is ready to hatch. For example, the mother platypus incubates its eggs by curling around them; the mother echidna incubates its egg by keeping it in a temporary pouch; a mother scrub turkey incubates her eggs by burying them in a mound of earth and twigs and regularly testing the temperature of the mound; the average bird incubates its eggs by sitting on them to keep them warm.
The mother hatches an egg The mother lays the eggs, sits on them to keep them warm while incubating, then feeds them when they hatch out.
so they keep there babies together and away from predators