the chickens that i have dont. When a chick grows in an egg it does have an umbilical cord connecting it to the yolk to give it nourishment while it grows. Once the chick hatches it will come off in a day or two. I am not sure if the umbilical cord is there even if an egg isn't fertilized but I would guess that is what those white stringy things in our eggs are?
Yes, they do. When they are born, the momma cat chews through the umbilical cord, and the sack that each kitten is in.
Chicken eggs contain a membrane, just under the shell, that holds in moisture.
Mammals, birds, and reptiles lay amniotic eggs, so, yes, a chicken lays amniotic eggs. Amniotic eggs contain a yolk and aid in gas and energy exchange.
No. A chicken is a bird. No marsupial lays eggs.
An egg that comes from a chicken
No they hatch from eggs
Chicken is chicken ... possibly the breading might contain eggs and milk as part of the coating.
Yes, they do. When they are born, the momma cat chews through the umbilical cord, and the sack that each kitten is in.
yes
Chicken eggs contain a membrane, just under the shell, that holds in moisture.
yes they do. but only while in the egg. the cord is connected to the yolk where it is able to feed. but when the chickens hatch, they dont have a umbilical cord. just a small space where it once was (only for a new born).
Mammals, birds, and reptiles lay amniotic eggs, so, yes, a chicken lays amniotic eggs. Amniotic eggs contain a yolk and aid in gas and energy exchange.
No. The young of all birds including geese come from eggs which are laid by the mother, so the baby is in the egg outside the mother for some days before the egg is hatched.
No, only mammals which develop inside the mother's womb depend on a placenta for their growth, and therefore have an umbilical cord. (There is no umbilical cord involved in the development of those few mammals who lay eggs or whose babies develop in the mother's pouch.) Since birds are hatched from eggs, no placenta-umbilical cord mechanism is involved. Most of a fetal bird's development takes place outside its mother's body, in the egg.
No. Eggs are nothing more than an undeveloped chicken. Wheat is a grass.
Eggs can contain nitrogen because proteins are a source of nitrogen in food. The biological value depends on the diet of the chicken that laid the egg, and the preparation of the egg when cooked.
"Snapping turtles are hatched from eggs so they do not have umbilical cords." I know they are hatched from eggs, but I saw a baby turtle that had something like an umbilicus in the middle of its bottom shell. So I looked it up on Google and found a few references to the umbilicus of a baby turtle. I imagine the umbilical cord would be a connection to something inside the egg- the yolk? which nourishes the baby. But I haven't found these details yet. Elizabeth A. Feigon