Sperm are produced in the testicles and then stored in the epididymis until they are ready to be released. From the epididymis they travel down the vas deferens and are mixed with seminal fluid (produced by a number of glands) before finally entering the urethra (the same tube that urine is excreted through), the sperm are then ejaculated.
Pretty sure its the vas defer-ens
The vas deferens
vas deferens.
Vas Deferens and Urethra
The usual method is through sexual intercourse. This is when a male puts his erect penis in the female's vagina. And then after moving it in and out for a while, he ejaculates and releases his sperm inside her body.
Sperm cells need to be kept cooler than body temperature to maintain their health and viability. Heat can damage sperm cells, so it is important for them to be stored and maintained at a slightly lower temperature than the body.
You have the anatomy backwards. Sperm enters the body in the vagina, then travels through the cervix to the uterus and (if they make it that far) to the oviduct (or fallopian tubes). So sperm would not travel FROM the oviduct TO the uterus because that would mean the sperm would need to start their journey at the wrong end of the anatomy. Sperm travel by means of a whip-like tail called a flagellum. Under a microscope, sperm cells look like little tadpoles wiggling their flagellum to propel themselves forward. So, basically, they swim in the seminal and vaginal fluids.
trace the passage of sperm cell from the testes
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.
testicles
Sperm duct and urethra.
No, for fertilization to occur, the sperm needs to be deposited into the female reproductive system, specifically the fallopian tubes where it can meet an egg. If the sperm is already in the body, it would need to travel through the cervix, uterus, and into the fallopian tubes to reach the egg.
The egg cells travel down from the ovary to the fallopian tubes. If the egg is fertilised it then travels to the uterus where it implants and may developinto a baby. If the egg isn't fertilised then it is reabsorbed into the body in the fallopian tubes.
The egg cells travel down from the ovary to the fallopian tubes. If the egg is fertilised it then travels to the uterus where it implants and may developinto a baby. If the egg isn't fertilised then it is reabsorbed into the body in the fallopian tubes.
Egg cells will travel through the Fallopian, or uterine, tube to the uterus where it will implant if it was fertilized.
sperm is made in the testicles, then it is stored in the tubules (the tubes that go from ur testes to the urethra) and then they get mixed with all the ingredients that make semen so that the sperm have something to swim through... wherever the semen is is where the sperm are... simple as that however, when sperm AREN'T used, they are disolved by the body and recycled into proteins so TECHNICALLY sperm are everywhere in our body... or at least the chemicals that make up sperm or wat USED to be sperm
..of course :))
Sperm leave a man's body through the penis.
The sperm are formed in tubes called seminiferous tubules. They then travel into the epididymus (another tubule network), up through the ductus/vas deferens (another tube) up the front of the pelvis then over the top of the bladder nad back down posterior to it. Here they enter the ejaculatory duct (another tube) which empties into the urethra (another tube). Take you pick.
one
The usual method is through sexual intercourse. This is when a male puts his erect penis in the female's vagina. And then after moving it in and out for a while, he ejaculates and releases his sperm inside her body.