The
Poultry Club for Schools
Extraordinary Eggs! Nearly all animals produce eggs, but only some of them lay eggs outside of the body. Birds' egg shells are one of nature's great design solutions: thin, porous, yet amazingly strong. They are shaped and structured to provide protection and nutrients for the developing embryo. Bird eggs have 5 important parts. The most important is the germinal
disk. This is found inside the yolk and is the cell nucleus from which the
young bird would have developed if the egg had been fertilised. Cockerels
are not needed for egg production and commercially produced eggs for eating
are not
fertilised. The bulk of an egg consists of a white solution of proteins, mineral elements, carbohydrate, and water called albumen. In chicken eggs the albumen makes up 58% of the total mass with the yolk making 31% and the shell the remaining 11%. The shell of an egg is made from a type of calcium carbonate called calcite. This is the same material that also occurs in marble, limestone, coral, and chalk! Egg shells vary naturally in pigment colour. This is added on the surface of the shell and varies depending on the breed of the hen - Marans have a deep brown egg, Leghorns lay a white egg. The only breed to have the colour pigment all the way through the shell is the Araucana and these eggs are a delicate blue. In order to create an olive coloured egg, Araucanas are crossed with a brown egg layer such as Marans or Welsummer. THE CHICKEN EGG
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