A motile gamete is a sperm cell; it is motile because it has a flagellum and it swims around, and it is a gamete because, combined with the non-motile ovum, it can form a zygote and hence a new organism.
sperm is the gametes that are motile
Male Gonads
Sperm or spermatozoa
non-motile gametes and cell wall structure.
Female gametes are called oocytes.
Motile - The Moving or having the power to move spontaneously: motile spores. Archaea bacteria is motile.
Male Gonads
male gonads
Sperm or spermatozoa
No, some are filamentous or even with false branching. But in most of the algae their gametes are motile, having flagella.
non-motile gametes and cell wall structure.
* combination of gametes ( in gamete ) ...type (heterogamy), as with many green algae of the genus Chlamydomonas. Gametes of animals, some algae and fungi, and all higher plants exhibit an advanced form of heterogamy called oogamy. In oogamy, one of the gametes is small and motile (the sperm), and the other is large and nonmotile (the egg). Seealso egg; sperm. * occurrence in plant reproduction ( in reproductive system, plant: The cellular basis ) ...of size (i.e., heterogamous). The larger gamete, or egg, is nonmotile; the smaller gamete, or sperm, is motile. The last type of gametic difference, egg and sperm, is often designated as oogamy. In oogamous reproduction, the union of sperm and egg is called fertilization. Isogamy, heterogamy, and oogamy are often considered to represent an increasingly specialized evolutionary...
Female gametes are called oocytes.
The gametes in a plant are called the sex organs. These organs are called the ovary and the stamen.
nipplesIn biology, sex is a process of combining and mixing genetic traits, often resulting in the specialization of organisms into a male or female variety (each known as a sex). Sexual reproduction involves combining specialized cells (gametes) to form offspring that inherit traits from both parents. Gametes can be identical in form and function (known as isogametes), but in many cases an asymmetry has evolved such that two sex-specific types of gametes (heterogametes) exist: male gametes are small, motile, and optimized to transport their genetic information over a distance, while female gametes are large, non-motile and contain the nutrients necessary for the early development of the young organism.An organism's sex is defined by the gametes it produces: males produce male gametes (spermatozoa, or sperm) while females produce female gametes (ova, or egg cells); individual organisms which produce both male and female gametes are termed hermaphroditic. Frequently, physical differences are associated with the different sexes of an organism; these sexual dimorphisms can reflect the different reproductive pressures the sexes experience.
They are called sex cells, or to be more scientific, gametes.
Gametes are what reproductive cells are called.
They are the sex cells. They are haploid cells.