No.
corn eggs and all vegetables these days
the parents take them to a place where there is food.
Unless you want food poisoning, no.
garlic fish onions eggs cabbage
A kestrel typically lays between 3 to 6 eggs per clutch. The eggs are usually incubated for about 28 to 32 days before they hatch. The female primarily incubates the eggs while the male provides food. After hatching, the chicks fledge in about 28 to 30 days.
They go about 65 days or more.
21 days from the time she remains on the clutch of eggs. A broody hen may gather eggs for several days before remaining on the nest continually. Brood hens will move off a nest of eggs for food, water and defecation but not usually for more than 20 minutes each time.
Depends on the species and age. Chameleons under like 4-6 months shouldn't be left without food for more than a day, adults may be fine for like 2 days probably as long as they have access to water, also species which live in harsher conditions (e.g. veileds) could survive for a longer period but still I wouldn't leave a chameleon without food for more than a day especially if it's not fully grown.
Clutch and brood size depend heavily on the availability of food that year. In good times, when food is plentiful an average hen will lay between five and eight eggs but there can be as many as fourteen. The eggs are white and laid at a rate of one every two days. Incubation takes about 32 days and fledging takes a further sixty days.
Chicken eggs take exactly 21 days from the date they are started incubating. Hatched naturally, most broody hens will take about 6 days to gather enough eggs and then set the nest. For the next 21 days she will seldom leave the nest except for defecating and occasionally for food and water. She will not allow the eggs to drop more than a degree or two in temperature. Artificial incubation of eggs starts from the day you gather enough eggs. Eggs can be gathered for up to 7 days if the first of the eggs are maintained in cool humid conditions. Once enough have been collected they are set into the incubator and again, 21 days later they should start to peep (hatch).
Check under her. If the eggs are obviously rotten, throw them out. She will eat them if you don't! Gross, I know, but the smell is horrible if you let her crack them open. Click on the link below for a muscovy site!
In still water, frogs can see the ripples created when flying insects (their food) touch the water surface to drink or lay eggs.