It depends.There's "male" and "female" in some algaes, where a female genome, and a male genome come together to form the zygote.But they dont have male and female the way humans think of male and female.
Cats have four pairs of mammary glands for a total of 8 mammary glands.
In human anatomy (female), the Skene's glands (also known as the lesser vestibular glands, periurethral glands, skene glands, paraurethral glands, U-spot, or female prostate) are glands located on the anterior wall of the vagina, around the lower end of the urethra. They drain into the urethra and near the urethral opening. These glands are surrounded with tissue, which includes the part of the clitoris that reaches up inside the vagina and swells with blood during sexual arousal.
Anul is for both male and female.
OVARIES!
The ovaries are the female glands that produce sex hormone and they are similar to the testes in the male.
Mammals (both male and female) have hair and mammary glands.
Collectively they are known as male genitals
Bartholin's gland ----- a pair of vestibular VESTIBULAR GLANDS corresponds to the bulourethral glands in males
All mammals (both male and female) are characterised by having mammary glands.
Gonads. Male sex gland - Testis. Female sex gland - Ovary.
The male reproductive organs arePenis.,Scrotum,Epididymis ,Vas deferens,.Testes,Accessory glands,Seminal vesicles,Bulbourethral glands,Prostate gland
All glands are important but some of the most important are the pituitary, adrenals, testes (male) or ovaries (female), thyroid, and parathyroid
glans penis - clitoris scrotum - labia testicles - ovaries Cowper's glands - skenes glands
The primary sex organs of a male and female reproductive system are those that produce the gametes (egg for a female and sperm for a male) and the secondary sex organs for a female are uterine glands, uterus and the vagina. The male secondary sex organs are ducts, glands and the penis
Gonads is the term used for the sex glands in the endocrine system in both males and females. The gonads are then called testes in the male and ovaries in the female.
Female: ovaries, oviducts, uterus, vagina and mammary glands. Male: testes, seminal vesicles and penis.