You can find many retailors of incubators in the back of magasines like "Bird Talk Magazine" and "Birds USA" Below are some websites that sell incubators so you don't even have to buy a magasine : P avitech.com lyonusa.com aveyinc.com petiatric.com brinsea.com Hope this helps! Cartier736 ; )
to protect the developing chick and hold it as an incubator
use fertilized eggs
incubator which is like a hen sitting on the eggs and the incubator keep the eggs nice and warm and moves them like a mama hen would do but a incubator cost a lot of money
If you don't turn eggs in an incubator, the developing embryos may stick to the side of the eggshell, leading to deformities or death. Turning the eggs helps prevent this by ensuring even distribution of heat and nutrients, mimicking the natural movement of mother birds.
It depends how old they are. You need an incubator if they are in eggs still. I've seen people feed baby birds mouth to mouth...Pretty discusting! Leave it to the mummy and daddy birds for best result
With a incubator.
It's called an incubator. If you mean a sort of box with a thermostat designed to keep eggs, and later, hatchlings, at the right temperature for them, it's an incubator. Otherwise, the only devices I can think of for laying eggs are birds, monotremes (egg-laying mammals), reptiles, insects, spiders and so on, and various marine creatures.
i am a pheasent breeder i hatch pheasent out of an incubator i then sell them to food factories in Ireland Scotland and whales i hatch out 110,000 a year these birds take 16 days from they are put into the incubator to hatch.hope this helps.
Fertile eggs start developing when the hen starts setting, or when they are put in an incubator.
an egg incubator
Any non-viable eggs need to be removed, and whatever can be cleaned up should be.
Well, you should wait for her to finish laying all of her eggs. Birds usually lay eggs aday or so apart. After that, wait about a week so that if you take them away instinct won't prompt her to lay more eggs. Anyways, then put them in the incubator. I'm no expert in bird breeding, however, so I recommend you also go to your vet or local bird breeder for information.