Female lovebirds (and birds in general) can lay eggs without the presence of a male. This is perfectly normal - think of chicken eggs.
What is more important is the danger this poses to your pet. Laying eggs takes a lot of calcium, and when the hen runs low on it she may produce eggs whose shells are too thin for her to push them out. This is called egg binding, and it kills.
What you can do is to give her a nest to lay in - shoeboxes work well - and when she lays an egg, replace it with a fake one (available at pet supply or online http://www.fakebirdeggs.com). She will lay a few eggs and then sit on them. She will sit on the fake eggs for MONTHS before she loses interest. When she gets tired of them, take them out. By then she will have recovered, and be much less likely become egg bound.
It takes anywhere from 21 to 26 days for a lovebird egg to hatch after it is laid. Sometimes female lovebirds will lay infertile eggs, this is natural and there is nothing wrong with your lovebird but they will still sit on the eggs as if they were fertile. If you are unsure about if it is fertile, try candling the egg (holding a bright light up to an egg) and look for a black dot, blood vessels or a chick inside. If you see nothing (must be at least 7 days after the egg was laid) then most likely it is infertile and you should remove the eggs.
When there are all the eggs laid, remove the male from the cage and keep him separate.
Well you see if the Female lovebird stops sitting on the eggs then the predidder of the Lovebird will eat the eggs
Remove them, she will get over it. She may lay more or not.
They can mate and then the female can lay the eggs.
You do not have to but there has to be so0mthing like that it could be paper, newspaper, sandpaper or anything like that. i hope that helped.
how do you take are of lovebird eggs
If you mean the clutch, it is usually 4-6 eggs.
Does the male and female lovebird stay in the same cage with 10 eggs? If you have two lovebirds in a cage and 10 eggs, then you can be fairly sure you have two hens and not a pair!!!
Well, darling, technically speaking, lovebirds' eggs are indeed edible, just like any other bird's eggs. However, I wouldn't recommend raiding a lovebird's nest for breakfast unless you want to deal with some angry lovebird parents coming after you. So, proceed with caution and maybe stick to the eggs from the grocery store for your morning omelet.
I think so- I have a love bird and I see that it will mate with any other bird -parakeet included. However I am not sure if they will lay eggs or if the eggs laid will be fertilized. The genome differrence of the two should be considered and may be that will provide the right answer
Eggs laid on land are hatched on the land and eggs laid in the water hatch in the water. *o*
A sea turtle's eggs get laid in sand.