Question: How to ensure a small clutch
Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 7:06 pm
So this is my first time breeding zebra finches even though I've owned them for a couple of years, and so far my pair is doing spectacularly. I introduced them just over a week ago, they accepted each other super easily and the male got a really nice nest going and everything. At the moment, I have 2 eggs in nest from them.
However, since they're a young pair and are going to be parents for the first time, I don't want them to get overwhelmed. As such, I'm kind of wanting to ensure that their first clutch here is pretty small (2-3 eggs, which I understand could only result in one chick or none at all). That way, they'll only have to spend their efforts making sure two or three chicks are cared for as well as possible as opposed to kind of spread thin over a larger clutch. I feel like this is better for the chicks AND the parents.
I've read places that a way to do this is to gently put a couple of dummy eggs in the nest, tricking the female into thinking she's laid more eggs than she has so she starts incubating earlier/stops laying eggs. I have dummy eggs on hand, and thus far they haven't started incubating so it'll be easy for me to pop a couple in the nest without disturbing the parents.
Am I correct in assuming that if I were to put say 3 dummy eggs in the nest now, with the two others, she likely already is in the process of making a third real egg that she'll probably lay tonight? And that (hopefully), after that egg is laid, she'll think she has 6 eggs and thus isn't likely to lay any others?
I just kind of want to double check that my logic and understanding of this situation is sound. And of course, if this is a bad idea entirely for whatever reason, please do let me know!
However, since they're a young pair and are going to be parents for the first time, I don't want them to get overwhelmed. As such, I'm kind of wanting to ensure that their first clutch here is pretty small (2-3 eggs, which I understand could only result in one chick or none at all). That way, they'll only have to spend their efforts making sure two or three chicks are cared for as well as possible as opposed to kind of spread thin over a larger clutch. I feel like this is better for the chicks AND the parents.
I've read places that a way to do this is to gently put a couple of dummy eggs in the nest, tricking the female into thinking she's laid more eggs than she has so she starts incubating earlier/stops laying eggs. I have dummy eggs on hand, and thus far they haven't started incubating so it'll be easy for me to pop a couple in the nest without disturbing the parents.
Am I correct in assuming that if I were to put say 3 dummy eggs in the nest now, with the two others, she likely already is in the process of making a third real egg that she'll probably lay tonight? And that (hopefully), after that egg is laid, she'll think she has 6 eggs and thus isn't likely to lay any others?
I just kind of want to double check that my logic and understanding of this situation is sound. And of course, if this is a bad idea entirely for whatever reason, please do let me know!