All eagles lay two eggs. If both eggs hatch the larger chick will eat the smaller one. Conservation officers steal one egg and raise the chick in an 'Eaglefied' environment so the chick thinks that it is an Eagle not a human. Certain environmentalist groups (such as Environmentalist Against Grabbing Little Eagles) ignorant of these facts (or just plain stupid) impede such conservational efforts to raise multiple chicks.
A Female Eagle lay from one to three eggs. Five to ten days after a successful copulation, the female lays a speckled off-white or buff colored egg about the size of a goose's. The second egg is laid a few days later, followed by a possible third.
-Ben Newcombe
Depending on the species, eagles typically lay between one and three eggs, with each egg usually laid two days after the previous one.
hardly ever 3 but usually 2
Eagles generally lay about three eggs. Eagles have a life span of about twenty years and are able to breed at about four years of age.
2 eggs
A honey bee queen can lay between 1000 and 2000 eggs per day.
3 eggs
Hens can only lay a maximum of one egg per day, and typically for 300 days a year.
Bald eagles lay 1-3 eggs per breeding cycle.
Eagles lay 1 - 3 eggs per brood.
About 4 eggs are laid in one day by one female lice
Most eagles only lay a single clutch of eggs. Each egg is laid about 3 days apart and incubation, the process of the eagles sitting on the egg to bring up the eggs' temperature, starts with the laying of the first egg. The eggs take almost precisely 35 days to hatch. Since the incubation starts from the time the first egg is laid, this means that the eggs hatch 3 days apart. The average for the west coast eagle populations is almost exactly 2 eggs per clutch. Eagles can lay only one egg but can also lay three eggs and there are some rare records of 4 eggs being laid.
They could die, because it is to cold. However, bluebirds don't start to incubate them until all the eggs are laid. They lay 1 eggs per day.
This is a trick question. Eggs are not born, they are laid. And later they hatch. Only a live birth is said to be born. Aside from that, we cannot tell you how many eggs are laid in one bunch unless you tell us which species you are talking about.
We do not know and we cannot tell due to the simple fact that nobody was around at the time of the dinosaurs. It is probably most likely that they laid 2 eggs per mating season.
Yes. The color of feathers makes no difference in number of eggs laid. The breed determines the potential number of eggs per year but good nutrition and general health will often result in far better than average egg production.
Most small farm families with 8 to 10 hens and one rooster can manage well on the eggs laid per week and have extra to give away or sell. Depending on the breed you can get as many as 10 eggs per day. Number will vary with condition and age of the hens and the rooster will ensure a continuation of the flock for subsequent years if the fertilized eggs are collected each spring for a small hatch of chicks.