It is expelled out along with the menstruation.
endomertium
In the fallopian tube and uterus.
The egg is released by the ovary. It then travels down the fallopian tube. If sperm are present, fertilization takes place in the fallopian tube and it will travel to the uterus where it will implant in the uterine wall. If no sperm are present, it will go to the uterus and be shed during your menstrual period. --- This dumb fawk is talking about humans --- NOT FROGS
This is a biology question, not a physics question but anyway, yes it can. Most of the time it takes place in the Fallopian tubes, however, it can occur in the upper part of the uterus from time to time.
The uterine tube is called the fallopian tube and the lining is made up of tiny hairlike, fingers called fimbria. The fimbria move the developing embryo along the fallopian tube to the uterus where it will embed itself. Here it will grow and develop until it is ready to be born in about 9-10 months..
Egg cells will travel through the Fallopian, or uterine, tube to the uterus where it will implant if it was fertilized.
The fertilized ovum moves through the fallopian tube to the uterus. Once at the uterus the blastocyst floats around until it finds a spot on the uterine lining to implant.
the fallopian tubes connect the ovaries to the uterus
first the egg cell is released thru the ovaries. then it comes down the fallopian tubes and into the uterus. it then goes down to the cervix and out the vagina.
No, all eggs do not reach the uterus. It is possible for an egg to be fertilized and implant itself in the fallopian tube, causing a tubal pregnancy.
oocytes are carried to the uterus by villi all moving in one direction.
The fertilization of an egg cell by a sperm cell takes place, in normal pregnancies, in the woman's uterus. The fertilized egg then implants into the wall of the uterus and begins to grow there until it is time to deliver the baby. In some circumstances, however, the sperm might find the egg before the egg reaches the uterus, and the egg may be fertilized in the fallopian tube. Often, an egg fertilized in the fallopian tube will continue its path to the uterus and implant normally. It is possible, though, that the egg will implant in the fallopian tube and become an ectopic pregnancy. If not caught early, this complication can cause problems for both mother and baby.
The fallopian tubes (one tube only) will transport the egg to the uterus.
Fertilization usually takes place within the fallopian tube, and the zygote begins to divide even as it is being swept toward the uterus. Fertilization does take place in the fallopian tubes, the fertilized egg then travels down to the Uterus wall where it embeds itself. It is extremely dangerous if the egg embeds itself in the fallopian tube or develops at this site.A human egg is fertilized by a human sperm in the fallopian tubes of the female. The fallopian tubes are the passageway between the ovaries and the uterus.After fertilization, the developing baby travels down the tubes into the uterus where it will implant into the wall of uterus, establishing a source of nourishment for the duration of the pregnancy.In rare cases, the baby will not travel to the uterus and attempts to implant within the fallopian tubes, resulting in an ectopic pregnancy. These pregnancies often result in miscarriage and occasionally must be aborted to save the life of the mother. In even more rare situations, the ectopic pregnancy will later dislodge and travel to the uterus and progress normally.
The egg begins in the ovaries. Once an egg leaves an ovum it then travels down the fallopian tubes, then to implant in your uterus for 3 weeks and wait for fertiliztion.
No. The fallopian tubes just carry the egg to the uterus. The baby grows in the uterus and is not affected by the fallopian tubes
It's called a fallopian tube. It attached from the ovary to the uterus, it's where the eggs travel through.