NO. Unlike the menstrual cycles of mammals, avian ovulation cycles reoccur on an approximate daily basis until a species-specific number of eggs or a clutch is produced. For Gallus gallus (chickens) that cycle can be maintained with artificial light to offset the seasonal stimulus.
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β 13y agoWiki User
β 13y agoIf unfertilized, it can be loosely compared to a menstrual period, but a chicken will lay eggs whether it is fertilized or not.
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β 13y agoYup, and you probably eat one for your breakfast. Yeah you heard me right, you eat chicken period each time you eat a egg.
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β 9y agoUhhh no. You see, eggs are the babies of the chicken. Just like a human baby but it comes out as an egg thats holding a baby inside. (In simplest form)
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β 13y agoYup.....I know it sounds pretty sick, but it's true.
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β 9y agoNo. No animal that lays eggs can get a period.
No
A chicken
The egg because what would the chicken come from
A fertilized chicken egg is considered diploid, while an unfertilized chicken egg is haploid. Chickens are diploid when you are considering chromosomes.
yes because the chicken is inside of the egg.if the chicken wasnt it would be called just an egg
No, the egg is not released during menstruation. Menstruation occurs when the lining of the uterus sheds because fertilization did not occur. The egg is released during ovulation, which typically happens around the middle of a woman's menstrual cycle.
If a chicken had a miscarriage there would be no egg, that would be like asking what to do with the baby I had after I miscarried...
chicken because god made chicken first, he would not of but egg first because there would not of had any chicken around to keep it warm so i think its an chicken besides an egg cannot be make by itself
i think the egg came first you don't necessarily need a chicken to have an egg it could be a hybrid egg that would hatch to be a chicken thus the egg is first
Menstruation is related to reproduction because it is a natural process that prepares the body for the possibility of pregnancy. Each month, the lining of the uterus thickens in preparation for a potential fertilized egg. When no fertilization occurs, this lining is shed during menstruation to make way for a new cycle of egg development.
No, menstruation does not occur if the egg is fertilized. Instead, the fertilized egg implants in the uterus to begin pregnancy. If fertilization does not occur, then the uterine lining sheds during menstruation.
It would be about half the size of a small chicken egg or slightly smaller than half.