Tik-tok hatch clock! We’re on hatch watch at Decorah North!

We are on hatch watch at Decorah North! While both eaglets still have open body cavities, most of their major morphological changes are done. At this point:

  • Their eyelids still need to close all the way.
  • Their eyes are growing into their sockets, more or less. Eaglets often have big bulgy ‘blueberry eyes’ when they hatch. Their eyes settle into their sockets during the first few days after hatch.
  • Natal down is growing from feather germs.
  • The chicks are squirming themselves into hatching position.

What happens right before hatch?

Just a few days from external pip, the rapidly growing embryo is taking up nearly all the space in the egg. It…

  • Turns so that its head is at the large end of the egg next to the air space.
  • Pierces the internal membrane – the internal pip – and begins to breathe air with its lungs. Hatch has started!
  • Takes the yolk sac into its body as it consumes the remaining albumen and yolk. Its body cavity seals, leaving behind a yolk sac scar, aka the eaglet belly button!
  • Grows enough to contract the hatching muscle, pointing its head up and positioning its egg tooth against the shell of the egg. The eggshell is thinner and weaker than when it was laid, since the growing embryo absorbed calcium from the shell for its bones.
  • Rubs its egg tooth against the shell, which cuts a small hole. We have an external pip!
  • Rotates its body, slowly cutting a ring around the shell.
  • Pushes its body against the shell, forcing the shell apart.
  • Works itself free of the shell membranes and halves. The eaglet has landed and hatch is complete!

We are so looking forward to hatch! Curious about what’s in store? Watch this 2019 video showing pip in Decorah!

Thanks so much for watching with us!

Information about embryo development hatch was taken from work done by Dr. Peter Sharpe from the Institute for Wildlife Studies. He developed a table of bald eagle embryonic development based on work done by Hamburger and Hamilton (1951). While this animation uses a chicken instead of a bald eagle, the sequence of development is fairly similar.