Abstract
1. Embryos in eggs laid by older birds were developmentally more advanced, both at oviposition and after 24 to 42 h incubation, than those in eggs from younger birds.
2. Storage of eggs caused shrinkage of the blastoderm. The amount of shrinkage tended to decrease with parental age.
3. The developmental age of embryos after 42‐h incubation increased with parental age but was reduced by storage, with embryos in eggs from middle‐aged birds (35 to 40 weeks of age) being least retarded.
4. The rate of development in fresh eggs increased with parental age. Storage reduced the rate of development equally at all flock ages.
5. The number of malformed embryos increased with storage time. After 14‐d storage there were fewer abnormalities in eggs from birds between 31 and 49 weeks of age than in younger or older birds.