I wouldn't use water, but if you use a heat lamp, you could probably hatch chickens. If I did use water though, it would be warm. Not hot, or cold.
If it is out in the wild,if the egg is hatching,the egg will be moving and it will have cracks in it.
No
i think it is?
you hatch eggs to grow the chicks into chickens for their meat and eggs to eat
Yes, the mass of the egg actually reduces due to moisture loss.
You are usually not supposed to bother the eggs after 18 days of incubation but if it's really neccessary you can. This may cause difficulty in hatching. This answer is in the case of a chicken egg.
If you mean the mythological basilisk, it's born of a serpent egg that's been hatched by a chicken or rooster. The opposite is true of a cockatrice, as the serpent hatches the hen's egg.
To hatch a chicken egg at home, you will need an incubator to regulate temperature and humidity. Place the egg in the incubator and turn it several times a day. After about 21 days, the chick should hatch. Make sure to provide proper care and warmth for the chick after hatching.
no because the mother will squash the egg and cause it to die
Candling means to hold the egg up to a light and see if there is a chicken in the egg and what stage the chicken is in its growing process. It isn't essential for the chicken to hatch, you can just do it if you want to make sure there is a chicken in the egg.
The egg itself provides the nurishment the chicken itself is not a mammal!
The chicken egg tooth, also known as the egg tooth or "caruncle," is a small, temporary protrusion on the beak of a chick that helps it break through the eggshell during hatching. This hard structure allows the chick to penetrate the shell and start the process of emerging. After hatching, the egg tooth typically falls off within a few days and is no longer needed.