no
Egg incubation helps chicks get out of their shells. Or for the people who have this question as a math problem, the answer is THE EGG SIT (the exit).
They eat, or absorb, the yolk of the egg.
Egg incubation helps chicks get out of their shells. Or for the people who have this question as a math problem, the answer is THE EGG SIT (the exit).
good chance for chicks(baby chicken)
If you have medicated chick feed, that would be the best, of course, but if you don't have anything else you can feed them hard-boiled egg. Chicks love it (mostly as a treat) and will eat it right up. Mash it up really good because if they can tell it's an egg, then when they grow up and start laying then they'll break their own eggs and eat them.
to feed the baby if the egg became fertile
Don't feed them cooked egg as this will encourage chicks to eat their eggs when they grow up. Alternatives are rice and sweet corn which provide the chicks with natural, healthy sugars. Peas and broccoli can be given, but wait till they are about a month old. Make sure no chocolate or sugary sweets get into the chicks diet as this can give them heavy indigestion and makes them ill.
Nothing really bad will happen unless you let the baby chicks grow. This is because lets say that the egg was token for cooking use, when a person cracks the egg open they will just simply find to yokes in it. But if the egg is left for a baby chick to hatch, there won't be enough space in the egg shell to hold both baby chicks. So in that case one or possibly both of the baby chicks would die.
Hatching is the process in which baby birds (called chicks) come out of the egg they are born in. The chicks have an egg tooth that they use to break out of the egg. Once the chick has broken the eggshell, its egg tooth will fall off. I hope this helps!
Do not feed a baby honey or eggs or egg whites until they are over the age of 1.
They are typically processed for animal feed or other products.
Baby chickens are called chicks and they come from eggs. A fertilized egg is either hatched by a brooding hen or artificially incubated. Chicks can be ordered and purchased from large hatcheries via any local feed and grain outlet, usually in the spring of the year. Chicks ordered in quantity are not expensive with average prices in North America under $1.00 each, the more you buy the less they cost.