Fertilized eggs, no rooster

Paz

Crowing
Jul 15, 2022
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The Middle East
My Blue copper Marans eggs seem to be fertilized. I haven’t had a rooster since October probably… she likes to wander around, sometimes I can’t even find her, and she comes back when the sun sets.
The yolk in her eggs is also more orange than my other hens. And the shells are softer.
Does she go visit someone else’s flock?
 
My Blue copper Marans eggs seem to be fertilized. I haven’t had a rooster since October probably… she likes to wander around, sometimes I can’t even find her, and she comes back when the sun sets.
The yolk in her eggs is also more orange than my other hens. And the shells are softer.
Does she go visit someone else’s flock?
Why do you think they are fertilized?
 
@Paz do they have the telltale bullseye? If any neighbors have free ranging flocks, yes the eggs could be fertile. 🙂 Do your yolks have this?

1742478824743.jpeg


https://extension.psu.edu/fertilized-vs-non-fertile-egg
 
The yolk in her eggs is also more orange than my other hens.
That means while she is foraging she is eating stuff with certain carotenes. That could be flower petals, dark green plants, or other things. It has nothing to do with nutrients, just that she is eating the right dyes.

And the shells are softer.
She may not be eating enough calcium or her body may not process the calcium she eats.

Does she go visit someone else’s flock?
Probably if the eggs are fertile. That is the simple straightforward explanation. But occasionally life isn't that simple. Seems like something can always complicate things. Parthenogenesis can cause the bull's eye. It's not real common but it is a possibility. The most likely answer is a rooster.

Parthenogenesis: Embryonic development in unfertilized eggs may impact normal fertilization and embryonic mortality | The Poultry Site
 

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