English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-12-27 11:32:09 · 9 answers · asked by Mai 1 in Pets Birds

Are there chances of its survival?

2006-12-27 11:52:05 · update #1

9 answers

Edit your post and let us know how long the egg has been layed and then incubated,

Its a pity because i know with eggs if they are cracked you can put clear nail varnish over the crack, you know like the clear nail strethen stuff? but this is chipped its open plus you can see movement so u'd probably kill it by going down that root,

Put the egg back with mum, how you found it, there isnt anything you can do. and also DO-NOT try helping the chick out it is most probably too young and also if u tried helping it out you'd cut one of the blood veins attatched to inside of egg and it would bleed to death, tiny bodys tiny amount of blood.


Sorry

2006-12-27 11:47:32 · answer #1 · answered by worldchampatpool 3 · 1 0

Leave it well alone, you should only ever assist in hatching if you know exactly what you are doing and it is obvious that you don't, (no offense) Hatching doesn't happen like you see in the cartoons, egg one minuet baby bird saying "mama" the next, Hatching takes hours, in many cases days. The embryonic sac needs to dry out before the chick can break through it and the blood calls within it to Break down and break connection with the umbilical chord. if even one of these blood vessels were to break the chick could bleed to death. my Partner once spent about 36 hours hand hatching a European eagle owl because he was unable to get out by himself. he finally got out at bang on midnight. needless to say, that is what he was called and we still have him now. But like i say, do not attempt to help it out, no matter how much it squeaks or how tempting it seems.

2006-12-27 11:42:33 · answer #2 · answered by Aquila 4 · 1 0

I actually have a girl cockatiel and he or she is an egg laying gadget. She purely won't end. She does precisely each and every thing you defined. commonly they lay eggs the different day. she would be able to lay greater. The lay as much as a snatch of four or 5 eggs. in case you're taking the egg out of the cage she would be able to maintain laying. depart the egg in there. It won't hatch b/c she does not have a male. She would or would possibly not take a seat on them. After approximately 10 days she would be able to grow to be bored and end sitting on them. as quickly as she stops paying interest to them take the eggs out. additionally the cuttle bone is physically powerful. i'm able to continuously tell my fowl is going to place eggs b/c she chops on the cuttle bone and he or she makes those little noises along with her butt up.

2016-12-11 17:14:38 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There probably isn't much you can do. Seeing movement means the bird is still alive inside. Make sure that it is kept warm and make sure to take care of it (and the other birds, of course) if it hatches.

2006-12-27 11:39:55 · answer #4 · answered by orangeparsnips 1 · 0 0

Well, that sucks im sorry :( I would leave it to the mom she will do her best to look after it. If your really worried call your trusted avian vet to come to your house, but DON'T move the egg.

2006-12-27 16:23:56 · answer #5 · answered by Angel M 2 · 0 0

leave it alone, just wait to see what happens
never assist a chick getting out of an egg, it will kill the chick

2006-12-27 19:16:12 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If it's due to hatch, let it hatch. If it's not due, leave it in the nest and hope the hole doesn't affect the rest of the incubation. If it does, that's nature, and there's nothing else you can do....

2006-12-27 11:40:25 · answer #7 · answered by beetlejuice49423 5 · 0 0

leave it alone.
once she has egges keep out of the box unless you absolutely have to go in.

2006-12-27 15:06:08 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

leave it alone

2006-12-30 08:02:20 · answer #9 · answered by nancy o 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers