The same temperature she always is - about 41.5C and a degree or so cooler at night. But that is NOT incubation temperature, that is around 37.5C.
When hatching eggs, there are two methods of hatching - 1) You incubate them in a incubator. 2) You let the mother set them.
no because the mother will squash the egg and cause it to die
you hatch eggs to grow the chicks into chickens for their meat and eggs to eat
a farm sometimes
No. It't the same as hatching chicken eggs.
establishments primarily engaged in the production of chicken eggs, including table eggs and hatching eggs, and in the sale of cull hens.
Human body temperature at 98.9 is just slightly under the required temperature for hatching chicken eggs. If you are planning to run a fever of 100.0 degrees for 21 days straight and have the inclination to be a chicken mommy then yes, you could. Just don't wave at anyone for those days.
The mother hen usually covers all her eggs to make sure that they are kept at the correct temperature for hatching and uses its beak to turn the egg over .
Fertile chicken eggs hatch in about 21 days, given warm temperatures and proper movement of the eggs by the hen. If you don't have a rooster in your flock, the hens won't lay fertile eggs and they'll just spoil.
If a mother robin leaves her eggs for an extended period, the eggs may not survive without her warmth to keep them at the right temperature for hatching. The mother robin plays a crucial role in incubating the eggs and keeping them safe from predators. Without her care, the eggs may not hatch, or the chicks may not survive after hatching.
Eggs hatching
A chicken can be hatched from under the mother hen after 21 days of sitting on them, as long as the eggs are turned for the first 18 days, twice a day (morning and night). But, I think you are referring to an incubator, where you put fertilized eggs at a certain temperature, and turn them just as a mother hen would do. I have put a lot of eggs in my incubator, and most of them hatched, so you've got a good chance to hatching most eggs.