No. Human females are born with a certain number of eggs, many, many more than are ever needed, and they do not grow any more. An egg is shed at every monthly period so the number of eggs diminishes over time but there are so many in the ovaries that this does not matter.
No. A woman has all the egg cells (ovum) that she will ever have when she is born.
No, a female is born with all the eggs she will have in her life.
If it's not free range it means they produce eggs in a small metal box for their entire life or until they stop laying and then their killed and the meat is sold
Women do not produce sex cells on a daily basis. They are born with the amount of eggs they will have for life.
turtles produce and reproduce. they also lay eggs
the egg cell produce every time if you getpregnant in 9 months when you have your baby a egg again falls and you could have a baby again
In humans, males will start producing sperm at puberty. From then on the male can produce millions of sperm per day. The human female is born with all the eggs she will use in her life time. At puberty, hormones stimulate the ovaries to release one egg per month until menopause. Females do not produce fresh eggs during their life.
No, a woman is born with all the eggs she will have. They are not produced later in life, nor are they produced while she is pregnant.
Ringer - 2011 That Woman's Never Been a Victim Her Entire Life 1-18 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:12 USA:TV-14
Approximately 1/12 teaspoon
Yes, if stimulated and if she gives birth to a calf every year.
Yes, bryophytes produce pollen, but they also produce spores through alternation of generations. During the haploid (N) gametophyte stage of the pant's life, eggs and sperm are produced. The eggs are fertilized to form a diploid (2N) sporophyte plant which produces spores.
Yes. Note that tortoises should not be confused with turtles, which normally look very similar but spend their entire life in the water except when finding their way to the sea when born and when females briefly come ashore to lay their eggs and bury their eggs in sand, whereas tortoises spend their entire life on land and land only and lay their eggs in soft, smooth dirt.