BrainStuff Classics: What's the Difference Between Eggs of Different Colors? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: What's the Difference Between Eggs of Different Colors?

May 02, 20215 min
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Episode description

Chicken eggs come in a spectrum of colors, but they all cook up the same. Learn how they're created in this classic episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://animals.howstuffworks.com/animal-facts/white-brown-green-chicken-eggs-whats-difference.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, I'm Lauren vogel Bomb, and this is another classic episode. I don't know about you, but if you catch me in the wrong mood, I find the options in some grocery stores for seemingly simple things like eggs overwhelming. So in today's episode, we're going to talk about whether the color of chicken eggs matters. Hi, brain Stuff, Lauren

Vogel Bomb. Here Peru's the eggs section of a grocery store of Farmer's Market, and you'll notice curtains of eggs separated into white and brown, and sometimes even green or blue eggs. But once they arrive scrambled on a plate or baked into a cake, it's tough to tell the difference. So what is the difference between eggs with shells of different colors? This isn't a situation like rice or flour. Brown eggs are not more natural, and white eggs have

not been dcolored with bleach. Both varieties occur completely naturally, as do bluish green chicken eggs. But really all chicken eggs are the same on the inside. So what causes different egg colors among the same type of bird. We spoke with Dr Justin Fowler. We cannot make this up, who's a professor at the University of George's poultry science department. He said, the different colors, or the presence of spots or speckling, come down to the genetics of the bird.

Leg Horn chickens, which make up most of the commercial egg industry in the United States, lay white eggs, while Orphington's or plymouth rocks will lay brown eggs. The amri quana breed has a pigment that's able to permeate the whole egg shell and make blue colored eggs that are colored on both the inside and outside of the shell. So there you go. I want to know whether a specific chicken will pop out a white egg or a colored egg. Examine the chicken's earlobe. Surprise, birds have ear

lobes more often than not. Chickens with white or lighter ear lobes tend to have white feathers and thus white eggs, while those with colored feathers and ear lobes tend to produce colored eggs. Where does this color come from? Though? Here's where understanding how an egg comes to be is important. Chicken yolks or ova form in the chicken's ovaries. A fully formed ovum will leave the ovary and be deposited

into the oviduct. This part of the chicken's reproductive system has five distinct sequential segments which the yolk passes through on its way to the outside world. But it's the fourth one, the shell gland, that affects the color of the egg. This is where the shell forms around the ovum. Fowler explained the process. He said, the shell of all chicken eggs are made of calcium carbonate, a crystal that's white in color, So all eggs are at least at

the start white. Any that we then see that our other colors have had a pigment deposited on them as they were moving through the overduct, after the white egg shell had been deposited. You can see this if you open up a brown egg and look at the inside of the shell, it'll be white. Two pigments are responsible for the spectrum of chicken egg color. Shades of greens and blues are caused by the pigment bill verden, while

proto porphyrin is responsible for reddish brown hues. The same egg coloring process holds true for all birds with colorful eggs. American robin eggs, for instance, are famously blue. Oh, but that egg inside an egg story that you might have seen going around the internet. That's another thing entirely, and involves an egg accidentally reversing its course in the oviduct. Meanwhile, we'll leave you with the answer to a practical egg query.

Should chicken eggs be kept refrigerated or at room temperature? It depends on whether you live in a country Australia, Japan, and the United States, for instance, that requires eggs produced for commercial sale to be washed. This protects against salmonella, but also removes a waxy shell coating that naturally defends eggs against microorganisms, thereby necessitating refrigeration. Today's episode was originally produced by Tristan McNeil and is based on article white, brown,

green chicken eggs. What's the Difference on how stuff Works dot Com written by Christopher hassi Otis. Brain Stuff is production of I heart Radio in partnership with how stuff Works dot Com and is produced by Tyler Clang Or more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the i heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,

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