

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-68465549
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Batty Ol' Hens Broody Tincture
I wonder how long it actually takes to sit to actually start the development of a fertile egg. If a hen has to sit non stop for 12 to 18 hours to actually start the embryo going, it would make it all clear for me.Why do you think incubation of the first egg starts when a hen goes to lay her second egg? Having watched hens laying eggs the posture to lay and the posture to hatch are very different and I suggest that the eggs already laid do not reach start incubation conditions when the hen lays subsequent eggs.
Yes, that's exactly the question we're pursuing.I wonder how long it actually takes to sit to actually start the development of a fertile egg.
It would be so easy if so, but sadly, there's no known mechanism that registers time in an egg. But things do change with temperature (amongst other things).If a hen has to sit non stop for 12 to 18 hours to actually start the embryo going, it would make it all clear for me.
The relevant bit of the second (which is a really useful document, thanks for linking!) is this (under Landmarks of Embryonic Development):
Thanks Perris for posting the most relevant parts.Yes, that's exactly the question we're pursuing.
It would be so easy if so, but sadly, there's no known mechanism that registers time in an egg. But things do change with temperature (amongst other things).
that's very useful; thank you.I found this in a Dutch presentation for commercial hatcheries. About collecting the hatchery eggs.
. „When you pick up eggs that have just been laid in the middle on a paper tray, they may not cool down to 25 degrees Celsius within 6 hours. The development of the embryo then goes too far and this will lead to embryonic mortality,” says De Lange.
Source: https://www.pluimveeweb.nl/artikel/...ng-wanneer-broedeieren-niet-uniform-afkoelen/
my turn to struggle with a foreign language and google translate! Perhaps you can help again?I found this in a Dutch presentation for commercial hatcheries. About collecting the hatchery eggs.
. „When you pick up eggs that have just been laid in the middle on a paper tray, they may not cool down to 25 degrees Celsius within 6 hours. The development of the embryo then goes too far and this will lead to embryonic mortality,” says De Lange.
Source: https://www.pluimveeweb.nl/artikel/...ng-wanneer-broedeieren-niet-uniform-afkoelen/
No, just posted as general interest.The first paper is full of detail but the only trigger I see there relevant (to the question: what initiates incubation?) is temperature, in particular, this bit: "Although the interaction among several physical agents during incubation influences in-ovo development, temperature has the strongest influence (Freeman & Vince, 1974; Decuypere & Michels, 1992; Meijerhof, 2009), because it can hinder, promote, or maintain embryonic and fetal development, as well as determine its rate and duration. Eggs are submitted to different temperatures from reception of the eggs at the hatchery until hatching. During storage, temperature is reduced to delay embryonic development. Subsequently, eggs are heated to reactivate embryonic development immediately before setting. "
When a hen goes in to lay another egg and sits on the egg(s) already there, she heats them, variably of course, depending on her temperature, their position etc.. Anyone with laying hens can test this easily.
Also relevant, "In chicken eggs, eggshell temperature remains low during the first week of incubation and increases during the second week, reaching a temperature plateau around day 14-15 of incubation", so a relatively low temperature may be enough to activate the embryo to start growing, and maybe it gets high enough, at one or another spell of the hen sitting to lay, to trigger it in one or another egg. According to Assersohn et al (linked before) "Cell division begins approximately 2 hours after fertilization, and by the time the egg is laid, the germinal disc typically contains thousands of embryonic cells" so I don't think it can need very long or a higher temperature than a sitting hen normally generates to get the process started.
I haven't worked through their references yet; did you have something specific in mind in that paper that I've missed?
Thinking further about this, the process (development of the embryo) starts with fertilization, and continues as long as it's in the nice warm hen's body, and continues after the egg is laid for a time depending on the temperature, until it drops to about 25 C (according to that Dutch firm). So actually what we call incubation is re-starting it, and it would seem that it only needs to get to a temperature of 25 C or more to do so (all other things - like humidity - being equal, and conducive to egg incubation of course).According to Assersohn et al (linked before) "Cell division begins approximately 2 hours after fertilization, and by the time the egg is laid, the germinal disc typically contains thousands of embryonic cells" so I don't think it can need very long or a higher temperature than a sitting hen normally generates to get the process started.