Females only produce one or two eggs, males produce many sperm.
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.
Last I heard, women only produce a limited amount of eggs. This is assuming that you're asking about humans.
It gives them a better chance or increases the odds of having atleast one egg fertillized.
In humans, the testes produce sperm cells in males, while the ovaries produce eggs in females.
A female salmon can produce thousands to millions of eggs, while a male salmon can produce billions of sperm. The number of eggs and sperm produced can vary depending on factors such as the age and size of the fish.
Mosquito Females do. They need blood to produce there eggs.
Ovaries produce eggs.
Humans lack the enzyme required to produce vitamin C internally, unlike most animals. This is due to a genetic mutation that occurred in our ancestors millions of years ago.
Humans are animals. Animals have different ways of producing offspring. Birds lay eggs. Mammals give live birth and give milk, the same way humans do, which makes us mammals. Reptiles lay eggs or give live offspring. Amphibians lay eggs. Fish lay eggs. Insects lay eggs.
No, humans do not reproduce eggs. Women are born with a finite number of eggs, which are released during the menstrual cycle and can be fertilized by sperm to create a new human life. Men, on the other hand, produce sperm continuously throughout their lives.
Most fish do not get pregnant in the sense of that of mammals, like humans. They produce eggs externally and then the males fertilize the eggs. Some types, such as sharks, do get fertilized internally.
It's depending on the number of eggs released by the female. It is the same in humans, thought the twins instances do occur. The male releases millions of sperm that then try to find the eggs once released.