Sounds like your asking how to tell the difference between fertile and infertile. If so after 7 or 8 days you can candle the egg to look for embryo growth. Candling is nothing more than shining a bright light at the end of an egg and peering into the egg.
On the the other hand if your referring to the difference between a fowl egg and a reptile egg. Then your answer is fowl eggs are hard shelled and reptile eggs are soft and leathery.
Depends on the animal, but in general male produces sperm, female produces eggs, and MAY hold fertilized eggs until they grow (but not always)
The difference in size between medium and large eggs is typically about 2-3 tablespoons of volume.
Lays all the eggs, stays in colony, does none of the work, can command the other ants, usually the largest
Amphibian eggs and Fish eggs are usually found with a layer of a jelly like substance coating the egg. Reptile eggs are found with an egg that is protected with a shell.
One egg is layed by a partridge and the other by quail :)
Organic eggs are those that are hatched by natural methods. The chickens in a poultry farm and not given any supplements in order to induce hatching. Organic eggs are produced at a slower pace. Normal eggs have to be produces at a faster rate due to high demand. Chickens in poultry farms are given supplements and antibiotics. Some of these products are bound to end up the in eggs since they are a product of the chicken.
No, normal eggs are not unhatched chickens. Normal eggs are eggs that have not been fertilized and so are fit for consumption.
That's the difference between delicious & not!!!! LOL!!
A fish egg has baby fish in it, a snail egg has baby snails in it!
Pokemon eggs hatch pokemon. Yoshi eggs hatch Yoshi's.
Birds lay normal, hard-shelled eggs while reptiles usually lay eggs with a leathery shell that is flexible.
The difference is simply the animal inside. Hen eggs produce chickens if they are fertilized, and starfish eggs produce starfish. Also, starfish eggs do not have a hard shell - they are somewhat gelatinous.