You can hold the egg beside a lamp. You may see some blood veins or not. If you so see some veins, leave it back where it was, it will hatch soon. If not, it is dead. However, don't be upset if you do not see anything because some eggs may be born without a baby. I hope this helped!
egg-laying mammal and flightless bird egg-laying mammal and flightless bird
a mature, egg-laying bird, or bird of egg-laying age that is temporarily not laying eggs; in most cases a female bird more than 5 months old. An adult, female bird.
A bird is a warm-blooded, egg-laying, feathered vertebrate. Penguins are flightless birds.
a bird is a feathered,winged,bipedal,warm blooded,egg- laying vertebrae animal
No. A crocodile is an egg-laying reptile. A platypus is an egg-laying mammal.
The platypus and the echidna are egg laying mammals. Egg-laying mammals are known as monotremes.
They are warmblooded egg-laying vertebrates characterized by feathers and forelimbs modified as wings.
There are no egg-laying marsupials. There are, however, two types of mammals which are egg-laying, and they are known as monotremes. Platypuses and echidnas are both monotremes, the only known egg-laying mammals.
The platypus and echidna are recognised as egg-laying mammals. They are monotremes, which are egg-laying mammals.
The egg came first. Evolutionary changes over time resulted in the gradual transition of a bird species laying eggs with different traits, eventually leading to the chicken as we know it today.
Well, it sort of depends. If the female is laying/sitting on the egg that might mean it is fertile, but only if she is either trained or knows how to do that. But sometimes, the egg will be fertile, but the female won't know what to do, so she won't sit on it. Also, do you let your bird mate, because if you do the egg will most likely be fertile.
No. Egg-laying mammals are monotremes.