No, chickens are born either male or female. Roosters are male chickens and hens are female chickens. Gender does not change for chickens.
A hen is an adult female chicken.The set of all hens is a subset of the set of all chickens.
Too many roosters will just result in a lot of fights. Only one rooster is required to fertilize eggs in hundreds of hens.
== == Although most commonly associated with female chickens on a farm, "hen" is used to refer to adult females of any domestic fowl or galliformes, and can be used generically for all female birds. It is also the term for the females of some aquatic species, such as the octopus and lobster.
Yes, having 4 roosters for 6 hens is generally too many. One rooster is typically sufficient for a small flock of hens. The presence of multiple roosters can lead to aggression and stress among the birds.
Hens are mom chickens and roosters are dad chickens. Only mom chickens, hens, lay eggs. They lay eggs all year.
Definitely NO because hens egg is chicks before hatching and when hatched when it grow up it is already rooster if the chick is a boy but if it is a girl it is a hen..
No. UPDATE: Yes, in way you can actually tell, because roosters don't lay eggs and therefore don't sit on nests. So when your chicken starts laying eggs, you know its a "girl" (girl chicken= a chicken or hen, boy chicken = a rooster or cock) Roosters also crow and their combs and tail are most of the time (depends on the breed) bigger.
A rooster is a boy chicken so his baby would be a chick
They are both! Most of the chickens in the super markets are raised especially for meat use and grow so fast (heavy) that they are useless for breeding or pets. They are generally crosses between cornish and rock breeds. The roosters may reach market weight a few weeks sooner then the hens but they will soon follow.
a rooster is like a ram or a mayor but in this case the boy chicken that looks after the hens
Roosters typically live in agricultural settings such as farms or rural areas. They prefer areas with open spaces for foraging, access to water, and shelter for nesting and roosting at night. Roosters can adapt to various climates but generally thrive in temperate regions.