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I wish!! My coop is lockedAre you sure someone's not playing a trick on youSticking a fertile egg under your hens
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I wish!! My coop is lockedAre you sure someone's not playing a trick on youSticking a fertile egg under your hens
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Wow! Thank you so muchHere's another story similar to yours:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/bulls-eye-in-eggs-but-no-rooster.85297/
Maybe one of those AussiesI wish!! My coop is locked
Since all three of your birds are clearly female, you've had them for 18 months and they've not been with a rooster for at least that long, and they have no way to get out and have a date with a rooster, then if the egg is really fertile, it would have been parthenogenesis.
Now, that's not really common, but reptiles can do it, turkeys can do it, and some chickens can too - namely the dark cornish breed is known for being able to do this. So, even though there is no way your hens mated with a rooster, there IS a slight chance that the eggs are actually fertile.
Might be fun if you could get an incubator and set some and see what happensHowever, with parthenogenesis, most eggs will not make it to hatch and do die before hatching.
In turkeys when parthenogenesis occurs, all of the poults that hatch are males. It would be the same thing if it happened in chickens.If the chicks that hatch from the eggs are all female then your hens are parthenogenesising themselves
Thank you for correcting me.In turkeys when parthenogenesis occurs, all of the poults that hatch are males. It would be the same thing if it happened in chickens.