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  2. Chronic egg laying - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chronic_egg_laying

    While a single specific cause is unknown, chronic egg laying is believed to be triggered by hormonal imbalances influenced by a series of external factors. [1] As in the domestic chicken, female parrots are capable of producing eggs without the involvement of a male – it is a biological process that may be triggered by environmental cues such as day length (days becoming longer, indicating ...

  3. Stop Believing These Lies About Eggs - AOL

    www.aol.com/stop-believing-lies-eggs-000000048.html

    Most Store Eggs Are From Chickens That Roam Free Though many egg cartons have labels such as "cage free," "free range," and "pasture raised," a majority of hens are kept in cages. Only around 29% ...

  4. Chick culling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chick_culling

    Male chicks on a macerator conveyor belt, seconds before they are killed Chicks ground by a macerator. Chick culling or unwanted chick killing is the process of separating and killing unwanted (male and unhealthy female) chicks for which the intensive animal farming industry has no use.

  5. How to Raise Chickens: An Easy-to-Follow Guide for Beginners

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/raise-happy-chickens...

    Per Lisa, a chicken lays an egg roughly once every 26 hours, which is roughly once a day. So, to get 12 per day, you’d need 12 hens. That said, numbers will also vary based on a hen’s age and ...

  6. Forced molting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_molting

    Forced molting typically involves the removal of food and/or water from poultry for an extended period of time to reinvigorate egg-laying. Forced molting, sometimes known as induced molting, is the practice by some poultry industries of artificially provoking a flock to molt simultaneously, typically by withdrawing food for 7–14 days and sometimes also withdrawing water for an extended period.

  7. Egg incubation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_incubation

    The only living mammals that lay eggs are echidnas and platypuses. In the latter, the eggs develop in utero for about 28 days, with only about 10 days of external incubation (in contrast to a chicken egg, which spends about one day in tract and 21 days externally). [11] After laying her eggs, the female curls around them.

  8. Does the color of an egg's yolk mean anything?

    www.aol.com/does-color-eggs-yolk-mean-100011542.html

    The eggs from pasture-raised chickens have less cholesterol and more nutrients, Steele said, because of their healthier, more varied diets. Yolks are not the only thing that come in different colors.

  9. In-ovo sexing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In-ovo_sexing

    A present-day ethical problem with egg production is chick culling of one-day-old male chicks, billions of male chicks that are killed as part of the production process each year. At the day the chicks hatch from their eggs the chicks are sexed. During chick sexing the day-old chicks are