Down the back is a structure called the Notochord. The structure is cartilaginous and over time turns in to bone. You still have some of this cartilage when your a child, but as you grow up it is all replaced with bone.
Either side of the Notochord are somite that can migrate to make other tissues too.
In mammals, the embryo develops with in the specialised part of the oviduct .
In plants embryo develops in new seedling and in animals it develops into feotus which later develops into baby
The yellow part is called the yolk, and if fertilized develops into the embryo.
When a plant flowers, they store nutrients for the embryo in the seed. The seed develops after fertilization occurs.
notochord
plumule develops into a shoot and then form a shoot system
An embryo grows and develops in a females womb.
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you have a problem
it develops from a zygote.
The wall of the uterus.
coelom