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Why Do Bird Eggs Vary In Shape and Color?
Posted on Tuesday, May 17, 2011 by eNature

Ever wonder why birds lay eggs of different colors and shapes?

There’s a good reason for just about everything we encounter in nature and, as you’d expect, eggs are no exception. 

While we tend to not talk much about bird nests at eNature.com because we just don’t want to encourage folks to disturb nesting birds, bird nests and the eggs in them are full of interesting stories.


Why aren’t all bird eggs white?  Birds’ eggs are colored for protective reasons. The parent birds that incubate them are not always on the nest covering them, and at those times, the eggs are exposed to predators. The color, speckles or spots on them are camouflage. That explains why birds that nest in cavities often lay all white eggs. They can’t be seen even when the parent birds are not sitting on them.

Why are birds eggs shaped differently? Again, to protect them. Birds that nest on cliffs, such as many seabirds, tend to have eggs that are smaller at one end than at the other. This is to make them roll in a circle and less likely to fall off the cliff. Birds with round eggs, usually build deep nests that keep them from rolling out.

How do baby birds hatch? They have a so-called “egg tooth” on the top of their upper mandible, which cuts through the egg shell when it is time for them to come out. The egg tooth falls off soon after hatching.

Why do the eggs in a nest often all hatch at about the same time? Because most birds lay an egg a day, but do not begin incubating them until the last egg is laid. One notable exception is the barn owl, which begins incubation with the laying of the first egg. That’s why the youngsters in a brood range in size and age from the oldest to the youngest.

Have a favorite fact or anecdote about nesting birds you’d like to share?  Add it to our comments section below!

 

What to do if you find a baby bird or other young animal »

Some birds just place their eggs in the nests of other birds and leave the parenting to others! »

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Comments

It would be better if the question is worded:” Why are colored eggs and egg shape helpful for birds survival? ” Because we all know the “why” is because of their genes.  The helpful adaptation( of camouflage or egg shape) was selected naturally because it enabled the eggs to survive; the white eggs didn’t make it so that bird did not pass on that trait, and that trait was “out of the gene pool.”

Posted by char on 5/17

My dad used to tell me when I was kid that robin eggs were gargoyle eggs. I thought he had to be telling the truth because they were blue. Now I know better. Very interesting article. Thank You

Posted by Vincent Rogers on 5/17

They are completely missing the point of the egg shape. You try having something other than oval and smooth come out of your body, especially when it has a body and a head inside. Got to have room for all of the growth unless you want round chicks. No square eggs in nature. Oh yeah, how are blue eggs camouflaged? Are they reflecting water or sky? That doesn’t answer the question for me. I think it is cute when people think they know the answers to God’s nature. We are simply guessing on everything with our ever so inadequate brains.

Posted by Sharon on 5/17

I don’t really see how blue robin eggs are considered camoflauge.  Having said that, I always enjoy seeing them.  At his time of my life I enjoy pointing them out to my 5 yr. old grandson when I spot them laying on the ground.  He is really quite the nature enthusiast and enjoys exploring my 25 acre wood lot with me and his father, my son.

Posted by Exeter Joe on 5/17

I came upon a Rolls Royce mechanic’s website that has photos of a birds nest in a parts bin. He says it’s robins, but the eggs are pale beige with tan speckles.
Nice series of shots of developing infant birds. eyes opening, pin feathers showing.
http://www.everythingrollsroyce.com/Robin_Watch.htm

Posted by Pam S. on 5/17

I agree with Pam in questioning if they are robins.  The series of pictures are great.  I noticed how fast the feathers developed on the chicks.  Really neat

Posted by Exeter Joe on 5/17

They are english robins not american robins

Posted by jj on 5/17

just read an article regarding the harm that may be done to birds when people use bird calls to attract the bird…(makes them stressed out, and nervous, and exposes them to enemies…)..do you have an article on that subject?...interesting,...

Posted by Donna Nylander on 5/17

It’s strange to think that blue eggs are camoflaged, especially when you are looking at a picture that shows only the blue eggs in a brown nest.  If you’ve ever seen a male American Goldfinch, in bright yellow breeding colors, you’d be hard pressed to think of this as camoflage.  However, it took me a good five minutes to spot one the other day, as it sat among the new spring leaves, and another several minutes to get my students to see it.  Sometimes camoflage works when we least expect it to!

Posted by Brent H Baker on 5/18

I have a robins eggs on my porch a very well planned out nest it is very intresting to know why the eggs are blue and what they like to eat.Thank you for the info much appreciated they are very welcome in my world.

Posted by Joan Agoney on 5/18

Very well written article for the beginer. I have been in the wildlife education field for 30+ years and enjoyed reading this even though my experience and education reaches deeper into the possibilities…

Posted by DRA of WPZ on 5/18

Blue eggs aren’t just for robins.  I have a bluebird box, with nesting bluebirds, and their eggs were blue too!  I also have a nest box with eggs that are pink!  Regarding the shape of eggs, I always thought it was to prevent them from rolling out of the nest!  Try rolling an egg - it doesn’t go very far!

Posted by Andrea Sauro on 5/18

My guess is that birds’ predators probably don’t “see” objects in the same colors that we as humans do (like how dogs supposedly see in B&W, though I’ve also heard they see in “muddied hues”). What may not seem like camouflage to us humans may be truly camo to the predators hunting the birds.

Posted by Alice M. on 5/18

I have a pretty cool story about eggs. I found a northern mockingbird’s nest in a little oak sapling at our house. Because mockingbirds are not afraid of people, the nest was on a fairly low branch. I got several pictures of the babies’ development. For those of you who are concerned about my disturbing the nest, don’t worry. I only went out once a day, at the same time every day, and made sure that no one was on the nest. I made a journal of my observations to go along with the pictures, and I am going to (hopefully!) make a book out of it. I call it, To Hatch a Mockingbird. I got to see how fast the babies’ feathers developed. They fledged in thirteen days. It was a once in a lifetime experience. By the way, for those of you that don’t know, a northern mockingbird’s eggs are light blue with brown speckles/splotches. Beautiful!

Posted by LeeAnne on 5/18

this is about owls habit.is it true for all owl species in all continents?

Posted by digambar gadgil on 5/19

It’s joyful to see such vibrant color of a bird egg although I saw the patterns of other birds’ eggs when I was a child. I did ate the boiled eggs of some unknown birds ( It’s was the norm at the time and location). They were white in oval shape and tasted like quail eggs except the brown spotted appearance.

Posted by Karisma on 5/19

If found on the ground they might have been killdeer eggs.

Posted by LeeAnne on 5/19

It’s wonderful to have theory like evoluation. It makes explanation of the nature’s mysteries so simple. Used to be that the simple explanatin was, “God did it.”  Say that now and you are in for an arguement that will last as long as you are willing duke it out. Now, you just have to say, “nature, uh, natural selection did it,” and you can get that instantaneous warm fuzzy, but equally mindless, “ahhhh” from your group.

Posted by Dan on 5/19

sorry for that misspelling of evolution.

Posted by dan on 5/19

Giving credit to “natural selection” for every little detail of any living thing’s description hides the complexity behind Darwin’s theory and all the work that’s been done since his time.  For instance, some traits are the result of selection for other, seemingly unrelated traits.  When that Russian scientist was trying to get tamer foxes to raise for fur, he began to notice that when he bred less aggressive to less aggressive their ears began to flop down and their fur began to get browner.**  From this the insight came that in the creation of dogs from wolves something similar was probably at work.  So don’t just say “natural selection” at the end of every article.  Sometimes it looks like the author spends more ingenuity on making up stories of adaptive benefits than on the research itself.
It IS possible to devise experiments to verify these so-called selective benefits, but it’s necessary to use all the branches of biology, like molecular biology, genetics, paleontology, and so on, in addition to natural history.
And don’t bother agonizing over the factuality of evolution.  That is long ago settled.

**Recent NOVA program

Posted by Barbara Bernhardt on 5/22
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