ummm of course not
Alcohol negatively impacts the production of male sex cells. Many sperm cells mutate do to malnutrition, heat, and poisonous substances such as tobacco and alcohol. To summarize, it can lower your sperm count.
Yes, smoking can have a negative effect on sperm count. It has been linked to lower sperm count, decreased sperm motility, and abnormal sperm shape. Smoking can also increase DNA damage in sperm, which can affect fertility.
The deficiency of sperm cells is called Oligospermia. Oligospermia is the condition of having less than the normal number of spermatozoa in the semen.
Sperm cells need to be kept cooler than body temperature to maintain their health and viability. Heat can damage sperm cells, so it is important for them to be stored and maintained at a slightly lower temperature than the body.
No. But men who wear briefs have lower sperm count than men who wear boxers.
Yes weed kills off a lot of sperm cells, and damages and diseases some, which can result in a STD.
Yes. Smoking tobacco causes lower sperm counts - whether the cigarettes are mint or not. Some research suggests that exposure to a variety of toxic substances, including those in cigarettes, can damage sperm and/or lower sperm count. Sperm imperfections and mishaps are to be expected, given the sheer volume of sperm in one ejaculate. However, it seems that they occur at a higher rate in men who have been exposed to certain toxins, drugs, alcohol, and radiation.
Many terrestrial male mammals have external reproductive organs (testicles) to keep their sperm at a lower temperature than the body. Within the testicles the sperm are generated and mature by the process of spermatogenesis.
No, Sertoli cells do not produce sperm. They provide support and nourishment for developing sperm cells in the seminiferous tubules of the testes. Sperm cells are produced by germ cells through the process of spermatogenesis.
women do not have sperm cellsANSWERwomen have egg cells. men have sperm cells
Sperm cells are animal cells.
nurse cells nourish the sperm cells until they have fully developed