Because the baby would not develop properly in the oviducts as it is covered in a jelly substance. Also the womb is warm . thankyouu
Well many eggs are needed It depends what eggs they are If they are chicken eggs then you will need more than if they were goose eggs So that's your answer xD
As soon as turtles emerge from their eggs, they instinctively rush towards the sea.
It would make sense if it were directly connected but it didn't evolve that way. The ovary has many eggs. The connection is not direct to the ovary and the oviduct has to "catch" the egg as it leaves the ovary. At times the egg is not "caught" but gets into the free space. If the egg becomes fertilized, the fetus can began to develop outside the uterus.
Starting at the ovary, a newly released egg will first travel through the ostium of oviduct, then through the oviduct proper. Then the horn of the uterus until it reaches the uterus and then is passed out of the cervix and vagina.
Cilia are present in your fallopian tubes. They push the egg to wards the uterus. By the time the fertilized egg reaches the uterus, it is ready for implantation. That is the beauty of nature.
The oviducts job is to transport the eggs to meet the sperm, so they travel through the oviduct to get there every month or whenever your period is.
oviducts
An avidin is a tetrameric protein produced in the oviducts of birds, reptiles, and amphibians and deposited in the whites of their eggs.
It's the oviduct.
An avidin is a tetrameric protein produced in the oviducts of birds, reptiles, and amphibians and deposited in the whites of their eggs.
The oviducts carry the eggs through the female frog to the cloaca.
Cilia line the fallopian tubes. Cilia are like tiny fingers that move the egg down through the tubes and into the Uterus.
The oviducts job is to transport the eggs to meet the sperm, so they travel through the oviduct to get there every month or whenever your period is.
The cilia beat in waves hundreds of times a second catching the egg at ovulation and moving it through the tube to the uterine cavity. The cilia move the egg along the length of the Fallopian tube.
They have a bicornuate uterus, and two ovaries and oviducts. Only one of the ovaries is functional, however, when the working ovary ceases to produce eggs, or is harmed, the other non functional ovary will become functional and will produce eggs.
Many breeds of chickens are ready and will lay eggs by their 16th week. The first eggs from these hens are often small and can be mis-shapen or even yolkless as the birds oviducts are "practicing" what soon will become a normal everyday chore. Some breeds take a few weeks longer to mature.
cilia are very small hair like organelles in the respiratory tract that are use to move excess mucus and foreign substances away from the lungs and toward the nasal and oral cavities to be expelled by the body.