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.
If I had to guess it’d be the ability for oxygen to diffuse through the shell and reach the embryo?
I got curious and your assumption is correct for one of the limiting factors.
Here is what I found:
What’s your sources? Begging your pardon, that looks like a perfectly standard GPT answer.
Appreciate the share, that’s awesome info
I never even considered that but it makes total sense. Thanks for the great post.
Didn’t think I would find egg facts so interesting… Cool!
That’s eggcellent and I’m eggstatic that you enjoyed. Come back next Easter for more egg facts.
Benedict!
I don’t think I’m doing this right.