fallopian tube
Yes, ciliated epithelial cells are present in the fallopian tubes. These cells help to move the fertilized egg from the ovaries to the uterus by creating a waving motion that propels it along the fallopian tube.
Egg cells will travel through the Fallopian, or uterine, tube to the uterus where it will implant if it was fertilized.
The fallopian tube.
well, fertilization takes place in the ovaries. after the sperm cells enter through the vagina the enter the ovaries. where then the egg and sperm cells merge and the egg is fertilized.
An ovum starts out in an ovary (either the left or right). From there it travels through a fallopian tube to the uterus. It could be fertilized and implanted there (becoming an embryo instead of an ovum) or it could pass through the vagina and exit the body through the vulva.
The tube that urine passes through to leave the body is called the urethra. It connects the bladder to the external opening of the body.
urethra
The cells formed in female reproductive organs that contain stored food are called oocytes or egg cells. These cells are produced in the ovaries and are surrounded by granulosa cells that provide nourishment and support. When an oocyte is released during ovulation, it travels through the fallopian tube for potential fertilization by sperm.
Female gametes, or egg cells, are released from the ovaries during a process called ovulation. Each month, one egg is released into the fallopian tube, where it can be fertilized by a sperm cell.
In the Uterus toward the Ovaries.
the ovaries produce the egg that will floe down the fallopian tube to be fertilised or if not go into your uterus and you have your period.
The tube through which sperm finally leave the body is called the urethra. It runs through the penis and carries both urine and sperm out of the body.