I've only just got round to watching this, and learned a lot. It sparked off several questions in my mind.
- what mechanism makes wild birds lay full-sized eggs from the start, whereas chickens start small and work up to bigger ones over a period of weeks?
- I never realised that small birds like bluetits eat snail shells to boost their calcium levels when producing what, for them, is a very large egg each day for days on end. The decline in thrushes means that there seem to be very few broken snail shells around in our dry garden. Would it be helpful to add snail shells and oyster shell to a bird table?
- Never knew that wild birds can to some extent extend or reduce incubation time, to coincide with the emergence of necessary caterpillars. I imagine them all looking up the Met Office site on their phones and discussing the prospects for the coming week. Do the caterpillars have any such mechanism, so they arrive at the optimum time to best survive the bluetits?
- I didn't realise that the albumen has so many protective elements, such a large number of substances which target potential infections that may have penetrated the shell. Would these be classed as natural antibiotics, and if so, is that another advantage to our own health when we eat eggs?
- I think you could go off guillemots. That man who spends his time abseiling down dangerous cliffs in order to get covered in projectile poo in the interests of science deserves a medal.