Well it depends because if you touch the eggs she may reject them.
no if u touch it u'll contaminate the whole nest and all the eggs will die and they would never get a chane=ce to see the world around them.
The eggs won't hatch.
Mourning doves do not move their eggs around. They lay their eggs in a nest, and they rarely leave the nest unattended.
On land ;)
They do not normally do this. Chickens cannot pick an egg up and move it. They will roll eggs out of a nest and they will roll them into the nest if they find one close by in the hay or bedding.
no because the bird will not find his/her eggs
For many types of finches it will take 2-3 weeks for eggs to hatch once the parents start incubating them. If the elapsed time has been longer than this, and they still have not hatched they are probably infertile. In this case, you can just remove the eggs from the nest and toss them. There is no need to keep the eggs as the female will lay more.
Legally the only way you can move a sparrow nest is if it is a house sparrow nest. These are not native to the US and are considered an invasive species. If it is not a house sparrow no you can't move it. The Migratory Bird Treaty Act makes it illegal. See the related link below for more information.
Yes, It does not always work but if you move both the nest, the eggs and the hen, she will often stay with the nest. It is best to do this in the late evening when the hens have all settled in for the night.
They like to build nests on the tree branches if you cut it down you kill the unhatched eggs and prevent future nests This will make them go to another place where they can build a nest above predators
the range of eggs per nest is 4 eggs
No, snails do not make a nest, they do stay on a nest, they do not hatch eggs. The eggs mature and hatch by themselves.
Yes. Move them at night and try to minimise noise and disturbance. Put the eggs into the new nest before putting the hen in and don't let the hen see you taking the eggs out of the old nest. There is always some risk she will stop sitting depending on disturbance levels and the personality of the individual hen but more often than not you can move them successfully.
The Cuckoo is notorious for laying an egg in another bird's nest, leaving the host bird to raise the cuckoo chick. Once the cuckoo chick hatches, it instinctively pushes any unhatched eggs and chicks out of the nest, leaving the cuckoo chick the sole occupant.