No. First of all, the eggs you buy at the supermarket are unfertilized. They have never been fertilized by a male chicken (a rooster) and thus cannot grow into baby chickens, any more than a woman's egg cell can grow into a baby without a man's sperm. Even if they were fertilized, they have been stored at very cold temperatures, so by the time you got them, the chicken embryos would be long dead.
the hen will give the eggs
Octopus hatch from eggs. The female octopus protects the eggs and makes sure they are clean and healthy as they grow. She will die right after the babies hatch, though, because she doesn't eat the entire time she's guarding her eggs.
I keep my eggs in the original carton....you can be sure they have been there for awhile anyway, and nothing is going to make them fresher!...Australians don't even refrigerate their eggs.
A full sized light sussex hen could potentially sit on over 20 eggs. However, she would struggle to cope with that many chicks if the hatch was a successful one. 15 is a good number. Also make sure u mark any eggs that are underneath her, she will be stealing eggs left right and centre from your other hens trying to make them hatch too. there's a high chance these eggs wont hatch as they would be at an ealier stage of incubation when the majority of the chicks hatch. its very annoying when a broody hen steals all your eating eggs and you cant tell the difference between them.
You can't. Just make sure you don't hatch it! Your game will freeze.
If you want it to hatch make sure she sits on it if not take the egg.
turtle eggs hatch in about 60-80 days but make sure u give them plenty of time
I am not sure where to get fertilized pigeon eggs, but why not look into getting chicken or duck eggs. You can usually get them from a local farmer for free as long as you promise to return the young after they hatch. You are getting the same experience for free, or next to free! And Yes, chicken and duck eggs can hatch in an incubator.
Sure. The male of any species doesn't lay eggs. but girls???
I am not sure how true this is, but there is an old wives' tale that says something about roosters coming from the pointier eggs and hens from rounder ones.
I'm not sure about all lizards, but I'm sure most of them hatch like bird eggs: perhaps within a certain time period i.e. two weeks after being laid, but not simaltaneously. I'm certain iguanas (who can lay several dozen eggs at a time, in fact some have been known to lay almost 100 eggs...) can hatch over a period that can sometimes be as long as 24 hours. I'm a little confused as to why this question is in a category called "Ducks".....
Frogs usually lay eggs in any pools or large puddles they can find, especially after a heavy rain. Eggs take between 6-21 days to hatch. Firstly they are tadpoles and then through metamorphosis, they become adult frogs.