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Rooster
an adult male chicken
Hen
an adult female chicken
Chick
baby chicken
Yolk
is the yellow, nutrient-rich inner mass of a bird or reptile egg that nourishes the developing embryo, containing proteins, lecithin, and cholesterol
Embryo
is an organism in the earliest, foundational stage of development, characterized by rapid cell division and differentiation, following fertilization
Humidity
amount of water vapor present in the air
Setting eggs
the act of placing fertile chicken eggs into an incubator or under a broody hen to begin the 21-day incubation process
Incubator
is a device or apparatus designed to maintain optimal environmental conditions (temperature, humidity, oxygen) for nurturing living organisms
Dipping
placing a newly hatched chick’s beak into water to ensure it hydrates and learns to find the water source.
Brooder
a heated enclosure, structure, or apparatus used to raise young chicks, poultry, or other animals by providing necessary warmth, typically during their first few weeks of life when they cannot regulate their own body temperature.
Candling
the process of shining a bright light source behind an eggshell in a dark room to observe its interior, historically done with a candle
Germinal disc
a small, whitish spot on the surface of an egg yolk containing the female genetic material. It is the site of fertilization, where cell division begins to develop an embryo. In fertile eggs, it becomes a ring-shaped "blastoderm" while in infertile eggs, it remains a small, solid white dot.
Chalaza
a twisted, rope-like strand of protein in a chicken egg that suspends the yolk in the center of the egg white (albumen).
Egg white (albumen)
is the clear, viscous liquid (primarily 90% water and 10% proteins) surrounding the yolk inside the chicken egg.
Air cell
a small, stationary pocket of air located between the inner and outer membranes at the blunt (large) end of a chicken egg.
Shell
the hard, porous, outermost layer of an egg, composed primarily of over 90% calcium carbonate.