For Pets:



I feed some of my dogs raw quail eggs every day.  

Just as for humans, for pets, it depends on their weight to determine how many quail eggs they should eat each day.

For my Toy Aussie and Chi-Weenie, they are only 8 pounds each so they only get 1 egg a day.

But for the pit bull, he is roughly 60-70 pounds, so I give him 3 eggs a day.


Now, the good info on how beneficial quail and quail eggs are for your pet:


From:  

https://www.petmd.com/dog/nutrition/healthy-foods-checklist-quail-dogs


Quail meat is a relatively lean, low-calorie protein option for dogs and acts as a natural source of essential vitamins. Quail is also high in phosphorous and iron, which helps support strong muscle development.


Adding quail or a quail-based food to your dog’s diet can offer variety and is a good way to change up the type of protein your dog is consuming on a regular basis. Quail is also a novel protein, making it a good solution for pets with food allergies or food sensitivities to proteins such as beef or chicken.


Quail meat and quail eggs can provide a wholesome option for pet parents who want to feed a raw-food diet to pets as well, but quail products may be difficult to find in supermarkets.


While you can cook the eggs for your pet, raw is so much better.


From:  https://whitneyliving.com/quail-eggs-for-dogs/

When fed raw, quail eggs for dogs are one of the most complete sources of amino acids and are also good sources of vitamin A, riboflavin, folate, vitamin B12, fatty acids, and selenium.


Quail eggs are packed with nutrients as are eggs in general, but quail eggs are higher in some nutrients than chicken eggs whether you’re comparing quail and chicken eggs that were commercially raised or eggs pasture-raised hens.


Each quail egg typically weighs 9 grams, though they can easily vary from 7-11 grams. For context, a large chicken egg is about 50 grams. So, it takes about 5 quail eggs to equal one chicken egg.


The nutritional values found in 1 raw quail egg:


Protein: 1.17 g (one chicken egg has 6.28 g)


Fat: 1 g (one chicken egg has 4.75 g)


Vitamin A: 48.9 IU (a chicken egg contains 244 IU)


Vitamin E: 0.1 mg (a chicken egg contains 0.5 mg)


Riboflavin: 0.1 mg (a chicken egg contains 0.2 mg)


Vitamin B6: 0.0 mg (a chicken egg contains 0.1 mg)


Folate: 5.9 mcg (a chicken egg contains 23.5 mcg)


Vitamin B12: 0.1 mcg (a chicken egg contains 0.6 mcg)


Iron: 0.3 mg (a chicken egg contains 0.9 mg)


Phosphorous: 20.3 mg (a chicken egg contains 95.5 mg)


Potassium: 11.9 mg (one chicken egg contains 67 mg)


Zinc: 0.1 mg (a chicken egg contains 0.6 mg)


Selenium: 2.9 mcg (a chicken egg contains 15.8 mcg)



For more information on feeding your pet a quail diet:

https://milolovescucumbers.com/can-dogs-eat-quail/


Or, again, just Google Quail diet for pets