It depends on if you are speaking legally or physiologically. At the present time pregnancy is not possible for male2female transsexuals: they don't have the working parts. They would require organs that are not available at this moment: a uterus, fallopian tubes, and ovaries. GRS consists of a small amount rebuilding technique and a large portion cosmetic technique. There is possible hope for the future though, with external organ creation, it is possible that a male2female transsexual can get a true vagina, uterus, fallopian tubes and ovaries made from her own tissues and that work.
Female2male transsexuals also will get better care as a full set of working testes and penis will be built and attached by surgery. YAY!
As to legally, there should be no reason that a person born a male and changed by organ transplant (of their own grown organs) should not be afforded the same respect as to reproduction as a birth/biological female.
Transgender males can have a penis, a vulva and vagina, just a vulva, or a variation.It depends on the individual person, and if they're had any form of surgery.
Not unless they have begun female hormone therapy.
Male fish from the Syngnathidae carry their young. Human males do not have the anatomy to carry but a transgender female to male can be come pregnant.
She-male is a term used for transgender men working in the sex industry. They are born men and then by using hormones or implants, they get breasts.
Gay is being sexually attracted to someone of the same sex as you, transgender is identifying a different gender than that listed on your birth certificate. A transgender person can be attracted to someone the same gender as the one they themselves were assigned at birth, so from a certain point of view it may look like gay and transgender people are the same. The difference is that a gay man still identifies primarily as male.
Boys were favored over girls because the males were to carry on the family name. The females were to learn how to take care of the household from their mothers.
age 24 in females and age 30 in males. see link below for reference
Penguins, the males to be exact.
males carry the babies
Females carry two X chromosomes; males only carry one. A female carrier carries a defective recessive allele for a gene on the X chromosome. Thus, the female will not be affected because she still has a copy of the dominant allele. However, if she has any male children, that child will be affected because males inherit their X chromosome from their mothers.
No they cant. Female bettas carry eggs that the males squeeze out of them during mating, then the males fertillise them.
Yes. It is.