It can be,sometimes you will see blood patches in fertilized eggs.
A fertilized egg is an egg that is fertilized - in short terms, it can be incubated and a chick will hatch from it after incubation.
A fertilized hen egg is an egg that has been fertilized by a rooster. This means that there is a possibility that the egg contains a developing embryo. If the fertilized eggs are not collected and incubated, they will not hatch and will be indistinguishable from unfertilized eggs when cracked open for consumption.
yes
There is no size requirements, the egg is fertilized inside the hen before the shell surrounds it on its way through the oviduct.
The hen will continue to lay fertilized eggs for up to 10 days after the last mating.
When a hen lays a fertilized egg, there is no embryo inside. Embryo's only start to form once they are incubated.
After twenty-one days after the hen has laid the egg that the roster has fertilized the egg will hatch.
Yes- if the egg is fertilized, a chick will hatch out from that egg.
Only if they are fertilized and incubated. Most eggs are not fertilized and therefore will never become a chick.
Depends if the egg has been fertilized by the cock, and the temperature of the enviroment.
No. The rooster has relations with the hen and she lays fertilized eggs
Only if they have mated with a rooster. Even if a rooster in in a flock though, her eggs may not be fertilized, as he may not have mated with her. In that case, if you really want the hen to lay fertilized eggs, you could consider penning the rooster and hen up together for a few days.Actually, you can eat the fertilized eggs. It really makes no difference.The answer to your question is that yes, hens lay fertilized eggs, but only if she has mated with a rooster. If she hasn't, the egg isn't fertilized.