In 2012, a hen in Sri Lanka gave birth to a live chick without laying an egg first. The egg had hatched inside the mother's body. Veterinarians confirmed the chick was healthy.
In 2012, a hen in Sri Lanka produced a live, healthy chick without ever laying an egg. The egg had formed, developed, and hatched entirely inside the bird's reproductive tract. Veterinarians who examined the hen confirmed that the chick was alive and viable, and the mother survived the ordeal. It was, by any clinical measure, a genuine biological anomaly: a chicken that gave live birth.
## How This Actually Happens
The process is called internal laying or counter-peristalsis contraction. Normally, an egg moves down the hen's oviduct, gets laid, and incubates outside the body. In rare cases, an egg reverses direction and moves back up into the body cavity, or the egg fails to exit before incubation begins in earnest. If the embryo develops far enough and the shell is weak or absent, the chick can hatch internally. The hen's body temperature, around 41 degrees Celsius, is close enough to a standard incubation temperature of 37.5 degrees Celsius that development can proceed, though conditions are far from ideal.
What makes the Sri Lanka case unusual is not just that internal hatching occurred, but that both hen and chick survived. Internal laying almost always kills the hen. The decomposing material from a retained egg triggers peritonitis, a severe abdominal infection. A chick hatching inside the body cavity introduces additional trauma. Survival in either is rare. Survival of both is the kind of thing that ends up in veterinary journals.
## Internal Laying in Poultry Medicine
Internal laying is well documented in poultry medicine and is a leading cause of death in backyard and commercial flocks. It occurs most frequently in high-production breeds, specifically those bred to lay at rates their bodies were never designed to sustain. The condition is progressive: material accumulates in the abdominal cavity, the bird develops a characteristic penguin stance as the abdomen distends, and death follows within weeks to months without intervention.
Veterinarians distinguish between internal laying, where yolk material is deposited into the abdominal cavity rather than the oviduct, and what happened in Sri Lanka, which was a true internal hatch. The distinction matters because the mechanisms differ. Internal laying is essentially a malfunction of the release process. An internal hatch requires the egg to have been fertilized, to have traveled back up the reproductive tract or become lodged partway through, and for incubation to have continued under conditions that were hostile but not quite lethal.
## What It Means Biologically
Birds are not equipped for live birth. Their anatomy, physiology, and evolutionary history are all oriented around egg-laying. The cloaca, the single posterior opening that handles reproductive, urinary, and digestive functions, is not designed to pass a live chick. The fact that it occasionally does speaks less to biological flexibility and more to the extreme improbability of the circumstances aligning just enough to allow it.
Reptiles and fish show a spectrum from egg-laying to live birth, and several species have made that transition over evolutionary time. Birds have not. The Sri Lanka case is not a sign that chickens are trending toward viviparity. It is an outlier so far outside normal parameters that it confirms, by contrast, exactly how rigid the system usually is. The hen did not evolve a new reproductive strategy. She experienced a cascade of malfunctions that happened, against considerable odds, to produce a live animal instead of a dead one.
The case got significant media attention at the time and remains a minor landmark in veterinary curiosity literature. It is the kind of event that is simultaneously completely explicable and genuinely strange.