yes they can as long as they are not more than 1 week out of date
Yes. Chicks come from fertilized and incubated eggs.
Yes, like all birds, the eggs must be incubated to hatch.
There's a terminology problem here. Birds, including blue jays, lay eggs. The eggs are then incubated until the young birds hatch from them. If you consider "hatching" to be the same as "being born", then no, the incubation has already taken place. If you consider "born" to correspond more to the egg laying part, then yes, the eggs are incubated after being laid.
78-83f
The complete set of eggs produced or incubated at one time.
If eggs are to be incubated for hatch, they must be fertilized. That is where the rooster comes in.
Hens ovulate daily: their eggs. If their eggs are fertile there is a chance of them hatching into chicks, if incubated correctly.
A group of emu eggs that is being incubated by a male emu is called a "clutch".
The egg is not a chicken unless it has been fertilized and incubated.
Falcons are birds, so they hatch from incubated eggs.
Fertilised platypus eggs stay in the mother's body for around 28 days. The egg is incubated by the mother curling around it and keeping it warm and dry in the chamber of the burrow for another 10 days.
Crested gecko eggs can take 60-120 days to hatch. There are a few factors to consider when incubating crested gecko eggs. Eggs incubated at temperatures ranging from 75-82 F will take 60-100 days to hatch and have a 75-80% chance to hatch out as males. Eggs incubated at temperatures ranging from 68-75 F will take 90-120 days to hatch and have a 75-80% chance to hatch out as female. Eggs incubated at warmer temperatures for shorter lengths have a higher chance to produce male. Eggs incubated at cooler temperatures for longer periods of time, have a higher chance of producing female geckos.