well it depends if the chicken is taking care of it it will stay fertile if the mom chicken is not then you should take the eggs and hhatch them yourself they will die at night when it is cold if the mom is not taking care of them
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.
No. Springboks do not lay eggs. There are only three egg-laying species of mammal the platypus, the long-beaked echidna and the short-beaked echidna. These egg-laying mammals are known as monotremes. Springboks are not monotremes, but placental mammals, or eutherians.
A disruption in routine can cause a slow down in egg production for as long as 10 days. Once the hens settle back in and find nesting boxes to their liking they will resume egg laying.
The osprey typically mates for life. It usually lays two to four eggs within a month. It typically takes about five weeks for the osprey's eggs to hatch.
Most chicks grow up and start laying eggs at about 20 week (5 months). This will vary by a week or two and the first eggs will usually be small and intermittent. Proper nutrition and husbandry (animal care) play a big role in this also.
MY head
yes, what can i do?
Hens lay eggs without a rooster. It is only when the rooster fertilises the female's eggs that he will affect the egg production. (After fertilisation the hen will lay a clutch of fertile eggs which she will hatch.)
Not even a minute!
As long as they have a fertile rooster around who is breeding with them, they should certainly lay fertile eggs, though golden sex links only very rarely get broody and sit on eggs themselves.
2 minutes
As long as there is no rooster around to mate with the hens, you will not receive fertile eggs.
It takes around 60 days from conception to laying eggs.
You ovulate about two weeks after your period.
12 days
Tetrapod's are the group of animals that lay eggs. Animals have been laying eggs for a long time. Snails, fish, and many other animals lay eggs from which their young hatch.
No. The egg must be fertile, and being in the refrigerator for too long will kill any embryos. Eggs that are sold for consumption are never fertile, unless bought locally. Without a rooster the eggs will not be fertile, and batteries do not keep roosters, as roosters are not necessary for a hen to lay eggs.