AllExperts > Birds--General 
Search      
Birds--General
Volunteer
Answers to thousands of questions
 Home · More Birds--General Questions · Answer Library  · Encyclopedia ·
More Birds--General Answers
Question Library

Ask a question about Birds--General
Volunteer
Experts of the Month
Expert Login

Awards

About Us
Tell friends
Link to Us
Disclaimer

 
 
 
 
About Chrys Meatyard
Expertise
I`ve been raising/breeding/handfeeding/selling parrots for over 20 years (parakeets/budgies, cockatiels, 6 subspecies of conures, parrotlets, amazons, lovebirds, etc.). I've been published in "Budgies" and "Cockatiels" offered by Bow Tie Productions, and have written avian articles for publication in England. I can provide advice in raising healthy birds, handfeeding/weaning babies, some health problems (although I'm NOT an avian veterinarian), nail/beak/wing clipping, general husbandry, etc. I also have experience with racing/showing homing pigeons. I cannot diagnose specific illness over this website. If you suspect your bird is ill or if you have an emergency, contact an avian veterinarian or emergency pet clinic ASAP.

Experience
Experience: Over 20 years raising parrots and over 13 years raising pigeons. Organizations: Currently, American Racing Pigeon Union and American Federation of Aviculture. Prior member Miami Valley Bird Club, Southern Ohio Pigeon Association, National Cockatiel Society, Miami Valley Sportsman's Club, others. Publications: Monthly newsletters of bird clubs.

Publications
I've been published in "Budgies" and "Cockatiels" offered by Bow Tie Productions, and have written avian articles for publication in England.

Education/Credentials
American Federation of Aviculture, completed Level I course, Fundamentals of Aviculture. Keeping/breeding parrots and other birds for over 20 years.

 
   

You are here:  Experts > Animals/Pets > Pet Birds > Birds--General > ringneck dove nest

Birds--General - ringneck dove nest


Expert: Chrys Meatyard - 3/28/2009

Question
I have two doves whom I adopted because they had been at the shelter for
around 2 years. i didn't know a lot and one of the things I didn't know was
that you had to get the egg out fast or it didn't sink in maybe. There ended
up being two doves (can two doves come from one egg? I just saw one). The
nest has started to look kind of funky because it seems that they were so
attentive to sitting on it that they did not always leave to go to the bathroom.
Is that OK or is it bad for the babies?  They won't allow me to touch the nest
to pull out any of the yucky material.

Answer
Hi again, Kate,

I understand what you mean now.  You didn't pull the egg early enough so the parents wouldn't incubate it.  Eggs need to be pulled before about the 7th day.  Some birds start incubating immediately when the first egg is laid, some don't start incubating until the second egg is laid (most always doves and pigeons lay 2 eggs...if more, there could be 2 females laying in the same nest).  Pull any eggs you don't want to hatch right after the second egg is laid, but before a week goes by.

Sometimes an egg can become buried in nesting material and you don't see it, sometimes when a bird is sitting tight on the nest an egg can still be under the bird and a person only sees 1 egg, sometimes an egg can get "pushed" away from the nest and the other bird will incubate it at the same time the first bird is incubating, sometimes an egg "sticks" to the bird's belly feathers and a person may not see it if a bird moves.  There can be many reasons why a person may not see both eggs.  However, I seriously doubt 2 hatchlings emerged from 1 egg successfully.  There was another egg somewhere.  

Best of luck to you.  Doves are nice birds to keep.

Chrys
-------------------------------------------  


Hi, Kate,

I have no idea what you mean by you didn't know that you had to get the egg out fast.  Out of the nest?  Out of the bird?  This doesn't make sense to me.

It is very rare that a single egg contains 2 embryos.  I've seen this in chicken and pigeon eggs, but 2 hatchlings cannot possibly live successfully inside an egg and hatch.  There had to have been 2 eggs laid.

With doves and/or pigeons (these are related species), you have to clean and/or change their nest box whenever it gets fouled.  Diseases/illness are passed via feces, so this is very important for the hatchlings, as they are born with only immunities passed down to them by their parents.  Even inside the egg, an embryo can get ill, as germs can pass through an egg shell.  Since doves (and pigeons) cannot bite you, all you have to do is lift the bird off the nest, shoosh the bird off the nest, move the hatchlings to a box or other where they will be safe for a few minutes, and change the nesting material, the nest bowl, clean the area, etc.  All they can do is slap you with their wing and/or peck you, which doesn't hurt.  They can't bite like a parrot can because they don't have a hooked beak.  The adults will be upset with you for a few minutes, but they'll get over it!  You need to keep the offspring and their area as clean as possible for the best of their health (including food and water and the containers these are kept in).

Chrys


Add to this Answer   Ask a Question


 
User Agreement | Privacy Policy | Kids' Privacy Policy | Help
Copyright  © 2008 About, Inc. AllExperts, AllExperts.com, and About.com are registered trademarks of About, Inc. All rights reserved.