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Inside Story: Visualizing Inside the Egg Look at this crane egg. Until the chick started punching a hole in it, the outside looked nearly the same, day after day, for about 30 days since the egg was laid. But on the inside, this egg has gone through an amazing transformation! Let's learn about what has been happening inside the egg, and then we'll ask you to close your eyes and imagine what it's like to be a whooping crane chick inside the egg. The day it was laid, the inside looked like the inside of any chicken egg we buy in a store. Yellow yolk was surrounded by clear albumen (also called the egg white), all in a thin membrane just inside the shell. One tiny speck on the yolk was the only sign that the egg was fertile. That speck was the chick at its earliest stage of development. The yolk of the egg provides nutrition for the developing baby. Depending on the species, the yolk can be large or small relative to the size of the egg. Songbird eggs are about 1/5 yolk; duck eggs are about 1/2 yolk. For all birds, the yolk is way too big to ever fit inside the chick's growing digestive system. Instead, the developing chick's digestive system is directly connected to the yolk by a tube. The albumen is entirely outside of the chick. Its job is to cushion the chick. It must also protect the chick from drying out, give structural support to prevent the yolk from getting flat, and transfer water and nutrients to the yolk as the chick develops. But the chick isn't actually in contact with the albumen; the chick is inside a little sac of fluid called the amniotic cavity.
Read-Aloud: Visualize This! Now close your eyes and listen to this description: Imagine being inside a crane egg. The front of your body is curled around the yolk, which is attached to your stomach by a tube so you never feel hungry. Your backside is snuggly pressed in by the albumen. Even though you're floating in liquid, you can hardly move. As you get close to the time of hatching, your eyes start working and you probably notice that it gets a bit brighter every now and then, but you don't realize that it happens when your parents are off the nest. Your ears start working, too. You may learn what your parents' voices sound like. And if you're a whooping crane chick in Operation Migration, you hear recordings of an ultralight plane engine. Inside this warm, cozy egg, the noise of an ultralight isn't the least bit scary and you grow used to it.
Now the urge to scratch is even stronger, but this time you're scratching at the hard egg shell. This is not nearly as easy. You tap and tap for a whole day before you finally break through. This hole is called the "star pip." Now fresh air can get in, but you're exhausted! You fall asleep and don't wake up for about 24 hours.
Try This! Journaling Questions
First record your thoughts in your Science Journals, then read our thoughts.
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