you can either, 1.keep it and hatch it 2.leave it and don't pick it up
Well you should have been more careful but you should ask a vet what to do. Not some random people you don't know
The fault that should not be found on flexible cords and cable is the ground fault.Faults that should not be found on flexible cords and cable is the ground fault.
Sometimes the mother gets rid of the egg due to unknown problems. Also predators may put away the egg on the ground to come back and eat it later whether because they are being pestered by the parents or because of other competition. I have found a egg on the ground as well but the best thing to do is leave it :(. Hope that helps
There should be cracks in the egg but they are super small cracks.
Well, I found four chicken eggs on the ground once, I took them home and put them in a blanket with a hot water bottle. I didn't have an incubator so I warmed them, changing the water every now and then, If the egg is unrecognisable then maybe you should just keep it warm until it hatches, then feed it formula until it can eat seed. My eggs didn't hatch but maybe yours has some hope. I hope I helped.
Wrap the egg in as many layers of paper that you have, and secure the paper with the tape. The paper should (if there's enough layers) prevent the egg from cracking.
One Chicken egg has cholesterol of 201mg and 1.6gms saturated fat (55 gm egg) ... restricts their chicken egg intake to one or two eggs per week and most likely should avoid ... In summary, an eggs cholesterol is found in the egg yolk
When an egg is dropped, Newton's third law of motion states that the force of the egg hitting the ground is equal and opposite to the force the ground exerts on the egg. This can help explain why the egg breaks upon impact with the ground.
Leave it alone, unless it is in a place that is unsafe for people or the egg. If so, contact your nearest animal control agency.
You should not eat anything you have found on the ground. But if the item was vaccume packed and you can tell that it is then there should be no problem eating it but first check sell by date and that it has not been tampered with. AND MAKE SURE IT IS CANDY NOT PILLS OR DRUGS.
It depends on where you found it. If you find it in a nest, don't touch it! Once the smell of the oils on your hands is on the egg, the mother bird will refuse to take care of it. If you find it on the ground and it is cracked/smells rotten, then properly dispose of it.
in the ground(grass)