It just depends on how you treat it, if you take good care of it it could live 20 years
Usually in early spring. That is in the US. They will make another nest if the first one is distroyed or the eggs are eaten by predators.
Domestics? If so, it very much depends on the breed. If it is a alying breed, such as Campbells or runners, they will start around 5 months old. Meat breeds can take a few months more.
They lay up until their death, however, egg production slows after 3-4 years.
when ducks are about 5-7 months they start laying eggs. Depends on breeding and other conditions. They lay a egg per day.
6-8 monthes
The chick starts to form in the egg as soon as temperature and humidity are within ideal parameters. Ideal temperature for incubation is 100 degrees F and humidity is 50%. Once the hen or the egg is set the chick will start it's 21 day journey to life outside the egg.
Chickens, whether the chicken is brown, white, blue, red or, or... all start laying eggs when they are mature enough to do so. The average age for chickens to start laying eggs is 5-6 months of age. You will notice the wattle and comb begin to appear more red than pink as they become more developed and distinct. This is an indicator that the young hen is about ready to start laying. And brown chickens don't necessarily lay brown eggs. It's a common misconception. Brown Leghorns, for example, lay white eggs just as their white colored counterparts do. The color of egg the chicken will lay coincides with the color of the earlobe. A white earlobe = white eggs. Colored earlobe = brown or tinted eggs. Hope this helped!
Most chickens (i.e. Barred Rock, Rhode Island Reds, Leghorns) are between 5-6 months old before they start laying eggs. A mature/bright comb and waddle indicate a chicken is ready to start laying eggs. If you can fit 3 fingers between the pelvic bones, that also means they are ready to start laying eggs.
Peking DuckPeking duck is the name of a Chinese dish but the pekin duck, will be ready to have eggs at about 22 weeks and also can (in rare occasion) start at 4 weeks or when completely white
it takes about two (2) years to get pregnant
6 months.
i have ducks around that age and they lay eggs in February
Most ducks will stay on the nest and incubate their eggs for 27 days. They will not start incubating until the last egg has been laid, usually laying one egg per day.
They start laying eggs when they are about 1 year and 3 months later.
around July. In the Summer. our ducks lay all year round. A couple 'went off lay' during the winter months last year, but the majority kept laying. we have muscoveys and khaki campbells.
A female Cockatiel will start to lay eggs from 5-6 months of age, and can continue laying eggs until about 10 years of age. !
no you idiot Well first answer was direct. NO. It depends upon age of them also and where you have them. When it is natures time to have them start laying eggs, they will.
My ducks were purchased at a feed store as babies and laid eggs the following season
The chick starts to form in the egg as soon as temperature and humidity are within ideal parameters. Ideal temperature for incubation is 100 degrees F and humidity is 50%. Once the hen or the egg is set the chick will start it's 21 day journey to life outside the egg.
Female chickens (hens) generally start laying eggs at around 20-24 weeks of age. Some breeds take longer. They don't need a rooster to lay eggs and if you are lucky they will lay an egg per day. Again this depends on the breed, with some chickens laying an egg every few days. They lay less over winter, when they are moulting or when they are stressed.
You know when a hen is ready to start laying eggs when her comb drops, and her face feathers are full and have lost the "pinkish" color.
Here's my limited experience: Bobwhite quail hatched on 5/13/09. One egg was laid on 9/16/09. No other eggs to date. I have 5 males and 7 females housed together in a 3X5 raised pen. The pen is outdoors in Georgia. I had read that egg laying begins at 5-6 months, but one of mine obviously laid at 4 months. The shell was thin in some spots and thicker in other, which I'm told is typical for the first egg or two.