It can be very effective, depending on how aggressive you are with your breeding program, and how well you keep your records.
This type of selective breeding works like every other; you simply only breed subjects which display the certain characteristics you want. Basically, selective breeding for high egg production works like this - You watch your hens, and see which of them are the most prolific layers. Then, you breed them to different roosters, hatching out those babies. Recording which parents they have, wait until the F1 hens start laying, and see which bloodlines produce offspring that lay more eggs. All in all - its just a passing of genes and ect.
J. Hollister Tull has written: 'Produce infertile eggs' -- subject(s): Breeding, Production, Chickens, Eggs
Any breed of chicken can lay eggs for breeding if they are fertilised.
eggs
Breeding fish by putting the males and females together and letting them do what they naturally do to fertilize the eggs instead of breeding fish by extracting the sperm and eggs from the fish and mixing them to fertilize the eggs.
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The production of eggs is known as oviposition. After fertilization, the eggs are deposited by the female organism.
Selective breeding has improved food production due to only the best foods being produced. Animals are specially selected by how much of something they are producing, so breeding two animals with higher quality foods will make more animals producing the same quality products.
No, Lugia cannot lay eggs because it's not capable of breeding.
Emus breed during winter. Their breeding cycle begins as the days start to become shorter - around April in Australia, which is the mid-Autumn. Winter is therefore the time that emus lay their eggs. Australian research has proven that emu breeding season is dependent upon the length of the day. The amount of daylight directly influences the production of reproductive hormones.
Eating eggs can potentially increase testosterone levels due to their high protein and cholesterol content, which are important for hormone production. However, more research is needed to fully understand the impact of eggs on testosterone levels.