It depends on the person. With most women the ovaries may alternate with one releasing an egg one month and then the other releasing an egg the next. Women are born with all of their eggs and it depends on when each egg is ready and hormones. However, some women only release from one ovary because something is wrong with the other.
The fallopian tubes (one tube only) will transport the egg to the uterus.
Uterine tubes or Fallopian tubes (one on each side) transport the egg (ovum ) from the ovary to the uterus (the womb)
The tubes can grow back together. You can also have one implanted.
Baby daddie
Well, unfortunately, the ovaries weren't invited to this party, so they never got introduced to the sperm.Instead, the egg leaves the ovary (one on each side, but only one ovary does this each time). The Fallopian tubes (named after a doctor) have an opening at the end of each one that lets the egg come in. The Tubes (one on each side) is like a one way tunnel that both end at the uterus. The egg moves through the tube and finally moves into the uterus. If the female has sex when an egg is present, the egg and sperm meet and the sperm fertilizes the egg or at least tries to (not all sperm succeed; not all eggs get fertilized). IF it fertilizes, the egg moves to the wall of the uterus and attaches (implants). There it will stay until the fetus has grown from the egg. IF the sperm/egg don't fertilize together, the sperm dies. The egg is washed out when a girl has her period (bleeding).
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
Many reach the fallopian tubes, but only one gets to the egg.
Ovulation is defined as the release of the egg; they happen simultaneously as they are one and the same.
haha no, the eggs chill out in the ovaries and when its that time of month one egg comes out into the falopian tubes. the old egg from there gets flushed out.
The egg released by the ovary is moved by the fimbriae into the fallopian tube. Once fertilized, the egg travels to the uterus for implantation.
Sperm travels through the female reproductive system by swimming through the cervical mucus, uterus, and fallopian tubes. Only a few sperm out of millions will reach the egg, and the one that successfully penetrates and fertilizes the egg results in conception.
On average, the average woman releases one egg every 28 days.