I Breed Lovebirds and when their is a female lovebird in a separated cage I often find infertile eggs laying on the bottom of the cage. If you leave them their you will soon get even up to 20 infertile eggs so when you see that the lovebird have layed this sort of eggs remove them after 1 day or so.
Yes, I'm not sure how but yes they're called infertile eggs. You should just look up infertile eggs and see what pops up.
Yes, they can...although the eggs will be infertile
They can - but they'll be infertile.
As long as there is no rooster around to mate with the hens, you will not receive fertile eggs.
There is disagreement about this. It most depends on what you use your hen for. If you use them as incubating machines, then no (she might not go broody as often). If you are selling hatching/eating eggs, then yes, it should be discouraged.
Most ducks incubate and hatch their eggs in about 28 days. If your duck has been sitting on her eggs for 5 or more weeks, the eggs are likely infertile. If this is the case, you should remove the infertile eggs so the mother duck can get back to feeding and exercizing.
They lay about 70 fertile eggs and up to 40 infertile eggs.
The incubation period for lovebirds is about 23 days. So after this time has elapsed, and if the eggs were incubated correctly by the parents, the chicks will begin to hatch. If the eggs do not hatch then they are probably infertile and can be removed from the nest. It is common and natural for females to lay infertile eggs.
No, laying mash does not make eggs infertile. The fertility of eggs is determined by the presence of a rooster to fertilize the eggs before they are laid by the hen. Laying mash is a type of feed specially formulated to provide the necessary nutrients for hens to lay eggs consistently.
All female birds can lay eggs without a mate. However, without a male, the eggs will be infertile and will not hatch.
If you like sucking boobs and penises for a living, then yes.