If it is in a nest? Leave it be. If you touch a birds egg - the parents will then probably abandon the eggs as they will not recognize the smell.
So, if you find a Robin egg in a nest - Don't touch it.
Now if you find the egg just laying around randomly somewhere - well then you have found something interesting. You could;
a. pick it up and take it home to try and keep it warm till it hatches.
b. stay and watch for a good while to see if the mommy is still around.
c. just leave it and walk on...
These are some things you might do if you find a Robin egg.
Almost none. The egg might not break when falling to the ground but in the absence of incubation by the mother Robin, the egg has virtually no chance of surviving. If you find an intact egg that has fallen out of a nest in a tree, you may be able to incubate it artificially and a live chick will emerge.
Robins nested on our porch in Mississauga, Ontario, in 2007. They are back in 2008. Are they the same robins? Or are they the offspring returning to their birthplace? How could we find out? All robins look alike to us. We have photos. ET 19 May, 2008.
An Internet search found that female robins lay one egg per day and that they often hatch one per day in the same order they were laid.
How big does a robin egg get before it hatches
Yes, a robin will ,in fact, foster another egg. I think.
Robin eggs are usually found in a nest made by their mother.
Sometimes. Mostly not
The parents remove the egg shells far away from the nest so that predators aren't clued in to the nest's location.
Almost none. The egg might not break when falling to the ground but in the absence of incubation by the mother Robin, the egg has virtually no chance of surviving. If you find an intact egg that has fallen out of a nest in a tree, you may be able to incubate it artificially and a live chick will emerge.
in a owls nest
No. You should provide materials for a captive dove to construct a nest, however.
you go outside and you see a tree up in the tree is a nest in the nest there is egg get the egg and go to mews mansion
they hatched or some other bird ate them
in a tree high up
he he find a hole in tree and he build his nest and one of the parent stay in the nest the father go find the food the mom stay in the nest to warm the egg
"An egg bank contains frozen donor eggs, used for reproduction. A nest egg is typically an accumulation of money used for retirement. Therefore an egg bank is not the same as a nest egg."
Robins nested on our porch in Mississauga, Ontario, in 2007. They are back in 2008. Are they the same robins? Or are they the offspring returning to their birthplace? How could we find out? All robins look alike to us. We have photos. ET 19 May, 2008.