You need to give a bit more information such as: What is the turtle's species, and how many eggs were laid, age of turtle, conditions it is kept in, is it alone or in a group.
It depends on the size of the bird and turtle.
You cannot "raise" turtle eggs other than by putting them in an elevator!
no
No, they do not. As with any other turtle, the mother lays the eggs and heads back to the water. The parents leave without even knowing if their young survive or not. Other than laying and burying the eggs, there is no parental involvement.
No. She will stop laying after she has two or three eggs collected and often more as the other hens will lay in the same spot or close to her, she will gather those also. If you allow her to brood you will get no more eggs from her for about a month or longer.
Salmon laying more eggs than will hatch
because only half of the eggs live and hach
Simply, The queen in a colony lays the eggs. But a colony is likely to have more than one queen laying eggs.
It's definitely not good for the turtle! Many turtle species are endangered and it could be illegal if you eat those varieties.
That depends on the species of turtle, because each species reaches maturity at a different age or size. For the smallest species of turtle, the speckled padloper tortoise, they can lay eggs when less than 3.9 inches long.
Turtle eggs cannot stay in the water for more than 48 hours after they are laid or they will die.
Count the spots. If it has more than 20 spots then it is a potato beetle.