Seramas laid first two eggs help please!

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this link above shows the black Serama, Jerry, and the white and gray one, Frederick, (we still don't know if they are boys or girls need your help) now the black one is always in the nesting boxes and when she/he is in there the white and gray one makes a lot of noise like chicken crowing super loud and constant

The video below is better of my third chicken, Noodle he/she is a micro Serama bc he/she is so small and he/she is brown and also is starting to crow neither the white or brown one are in the nesting boxes yet that I have seen, and they were all hatched here May 1 and 2

 
Hi my seramas are about 17weeks old and we have 3 of them. We now found two eggs. They are perfectly intact and they laid them in the nesting box, but I don't know which of the Seramas are hens and which are roosters if any. None of the Seramas sat on the eggs and they didn't seem too concerned when I removed the eggs either. Can we eat the first eggs, they are perfectly intact. Please see video and if you can help me figure out their sec i'd appreciate it! thanks!
I have frizzles too and the comb on mine stay tiny. One way I tell who layed an egg is one starts squalking really loud and she will be at coop door or outside coop. They do that telling everyone else she just layed an egg. So the squalker is the egg layer
 
I don't see anything in these videos that would point towards cockerel. Frizzles can be harder to sex, but I truly do not see anything. They're over 4 months old now, and look like what you'd expect from serama pullets at this age.

For reference, this is a 1 month and 20 day old cockerel produced from my seramas.
20240616_164825.jpg
As you can see, this breed tends to show comb quite early-on.



Does the sound you call crowing sound anything like this?
People call this the "egg song", but it's actually an escort call
 
I agree, nothing suggests cockerel on any of them. Pullets/hens won't care a bit about their eggs unless they're broody. Just because a hen is broody doesn't mean you have to let her set, in fact if you don't have a rooster or hatching eggs for her to sit on you shouldn't let her set and should break her broodiness as hens will lose body condition when sitting and a few will even starve themselves to death or at the very least weaken themselves so much that they're vulnerable to something else
 

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