• @[email protected]
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    2912 days ago

    If I had to guess it’d be the ability for oxygen to diffuse through the shell and reach the embryo?

    • @[email protected]
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      4212 days ago

      I got curious and your assumption is correct for one of the limiting factors.

      Here is what I found:

      • The shell must be strong enough to support the egg’s weight and protect the embryo, but thin enough for the chick to break through when hatching.
      • As size increases, the weight grows cubically (volume), but shell strength only increases quadratically (surface area), so there’s a point where the shell would have to be too thick to hatch from.
      • The distance from the shell to the center increases.
      • Oxygen diffusion becomes inefficient, and the embryo could suffocate.
      • Larger eggs are harder to keep at a uniform temperature.
      • Birds incubating the eggs would need to generate and distribute more heat, which is physically demanding.
      • Victor
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        412 days ago

        Didn’t think I would find egg facts so interesting… Cool!

        • @[email protected]
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          12 days ago

          That’s eggcellent and I’m eggstatic that you enjoyed. Come back next Easter for more egg facts.

          • Victor
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            111 days ago

            Benedict!

            I don’t think I’m doing this right.

        • @[email protected]
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          112 days ago

          No problem. I get curious myself so figure it nice to share with people that don’t tell me they’re not interested in useless facts.

      • Max
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        111 days ago

        I think point two may be wrong. The strength of a shell should be proportional to its thickness, which would scale linearly with its size (assuming the shell got thicker in proportion to the size). There’s definitely a point where a self supporting egg requires very thick shells like you said, but the scaling law you gave uses the wrong change.