There is a lot of debate on this subject; some people think it is survival of the fittest and it would be unfair to give life to a weak chick and others think that they should help the vulnerable.
YES!!!! Do not open the egg for it. Espessially when you do not know for sure if the chick is ready to come out yet! It might just not be ready. And if you do try to open it, you might wreck the WHOLE growing process.
You should only do it if your are 100% sure that it is fully grown and ready. If you do it even 1 day too early you could kill it. I would let it go and let it hatch by itself.
no unless it shows that its struggling
heavy of course, because you do realise there's a chick in there.
There will be kind of pocket in the egg which contains enough oxygen for the chick to breathe in the egg for 21 days.
It is the yolk that provides the nutrients for an unhatched chick.
An egg yolk is an undeveloped egg. If the egg is fertilised it would become a chick. The eggs we eat are the equivalent of a women's period (time of the month). Dark
They keep the egg cratled in the father's feet
The chick grows in the albumen (the white of the egg) and feeds off the yolk.
Possibly, so you should wait until the chick hatches by itself.
Depends on the type of egg. A rooster and chicken egg the thinner side is always up, because that is the head of the chick.
The egg yolk nourishes the chick until it hatches.
A young chick develops inside the egg and can be hatched naturally or through hatcheries. The young chick depends on the egg yolk for nutrients.
The developing chick feeds on the yolk sac, much like the baby of live bearing animals attaches to the placenta. The chick has enough nutrients when born to got 24 hours without beginning on chick starter.
The chick egg has much more yolk than the frog egg. A blastopore in frog egg and a premitive groove in chick egg both have the same basic function which is to mark the origin of gastrulation