Yes. The chicken population at any one time is far greater than the human population. Millions of chickens are hatched each month and are slaughtered for food. There certainly is more chickens, it is estimated there are 10 times the number of chickens than humans.
Yes. In North America alone more chickens are produced than all of the human population. World wide there are more than 50 billion chickens produced by the registered poultry industry, this does not include small farm numbers.
The human population worldwide is approximately 7 billion.
No there is more human than chicken, call me
No. there are more chickens produced yearly than the human population of the earth.
Yes. Yearly production of chickens is approximately 6 times the human population.
yes they will rule us in the year 9999
there are more humans
Ask Yoseph Kiflie.
Because humans like the taste of chicken
There are more chickens than people in the world XD
There are more than 6 times the number of chickens in the world than people. World population today is almost 7 billion people and total chicken population is estimated at 43 billion and growing each year.
There are more chickens than people in the world XD
I raise chickens, and there are more than 50 in my barn.
they bachaw
There are more chickens than people because, chickens can multiply faster than a human can. On average a chicken can lay at least an egg a day when fertilized by the rooster. That's only the normal chicken. Some chickens can lay more eggs day than just one. It also only takes a 21 days for a chick to grow and hatch. Then the mother hen gets ready for another batch.
THEY ARE USED TO MAKE FOOD a dual purpose chickens ,selected more for meat prouduction than egg prouduction a dual purpose chickens ,selected more for meat prouduction than egg prouduction
No.
No more people watch the world cup, then the Wimbledon.
Yes, chickens are social and do better with a "flock", even when the "flock" is simply one more bird.
the cow because it poohs more than chickens.
Estimates suggest that around half of the global population speaks more than one language. This is due to factors such as bilingualism, multilingualism, and language diversity across different regions and cultures. The actual percentage may vary depending on the criteria used to define proficiency in multiple languages.