Susan Skylark
Songster
Some time ago I tried incubating some chicken fridge eggs and got development in 7/9 eggs despite being over a week in the fridge. It is commonly assumed that fridge eggs have a lower hatch rate because of temp, but in my micro experiment it didn’t impede development, but most of the eggs were stuck to the inside of the shell (not turned in fridge). What if the low hatching rate comes from not turning rather than low temp? I want to try a little experiment in a few weeks when my incubator is open but it will only hold 16 eggs or so, hardly enough to be statistically significant. Is anybody interested in doing the same thing with their own eggs and incubator? I’ll put together a little guide and record sheet if there’s any interest (check back here soon!). It doesn’t matter what species you have or the size of your incubator, as long as you can reliably treat all eggs the same save for the project parameters. Obviously there is some risk of lower hatch rates, higher embryonic death, and maybe complications at hatch so don’t do this with valuable eggs or if you have a tough time with tough or bad hatches! It could be a sort of participatory hatch-along that might actually contribute something interesting to our knowledge of incubation. This is completely voluntary and unscholarly, but could be really interesting, sort of a crowd sourced science fair project! What do you think?