Well to begin with, the turtle digs a hole and lays her eggs inside it. Unlike chickens and birds, turtles dont sit on their eggs to keep them warm, the sand does it for them.
BTW
Incubate: Sit on eggs in order to keep them warm and bring them to hatching OR Keep eggs at a suitable temperature in order for them to develop.
Yes, it is possible to artificially incubate freshwater shrimp eggs. The eggs can be collected and transferred to a separate container with controlled water parameters such as temperature, pH, and salinity. The eggs will then hatch within a specific time frame under these controlled conditions, allowing for successful incubation.
they lay one egg a day for about 12 days before they decide to sit and incubate their eggs. They also "steal" eggs from other chickens who are not broody.
There are quite a few species that do that. Cobras and some pythons are two well-known species to incubate their eggs by coiling around them.
After a Magellanic Penguin returns to it's nest, it lays 2 eggs in October. It then takes 40 days for both parents to incubate the eggs.
yes,We can incubate microbes in an incubator which controls the temperature,humidity or O2 or CO2 level, required for their ultimate growth.
THEY NEVER INCUBATE THEIR EGGS BECAUSE THEY LAY THEIR EGGS IN OTHER BIRDS NESTS AND THOSE BIRDS INCUBATE THEIR EGGS AND THATS A FACT....
NO salmon dont incubate their eggs, fish dont incubate their eggs at all, they lay them and the male fish swims by the fish and releases the sperm near the eggs and they become fertilized outside of the female fish.
Both Female and Male Eagles incubate the eggs. They actually take turns.
an egg incubator
yes
yes
Hello, you should incubate the eggs at around 84 degrees F :)
When they have hatched otherwise they will die!!!
yes
You didn't give a specific type of heron in your question, but Great Blue Herons usually incubate their eggs for 26-29 days.
buleys dont lay eggs
Don't do that, the temperature is too high and not suitable for eggs incubation.