Yes. The tissue that become the gonads (testes or ovaries) is the same tissue regardless of gender. This tissue starts of in roughly the area where the ovaries are in life and it the embryo is male the testes will migrate down and through a structure called the inguinal canal and into what will be the scrotum.
When you know that an embrio will be born with a serious medical condition such as a hole in the heart or incomplete closure of the heart walls then eith you fix the problem after the embrio becomes a baby and is born or you fix the problem before the baby is born
Alright, please disreguard the other "answer". They take a DNA sample from the organism that is to be cloned. Then they take an embrio from an animal the same species as the animal that will be cloned. Then they extract DNA from the embrio and replace it with the DNA sample from the animal that's going to be cloned. Then they place it back in the womb or uterus of the animal the embrio belongs to. It's not really cloning like what you see on the science fiction channel, that's why it's science fiction.
When you know that an embrio will be born with a serious medical condition such as a hole in the heart or incomplete closure of the heart walls then eith you fix the problem after the embrio becomes a baby and is born or you fix the problem before the baby is born
Pregnancy test have to be taken a few days after sex for it to properly identify the embrio
A tiny fertilised 'ovum' (egg) develops first into an 'embrio'. This develops into a 'wriggler' which then becomes a tiny 'fry'. This grows into a 'goldfish'.
No, if you do you will drown the embrio.
The cast of Embrio - 2008 includes: Marjana Brecelj Uros Furst Tomaz Gubensek Andrej Nahtigal Tjasa Zeleznik
Fish ova do not actually "hatch" they "develop". As the embrio (fry) develops, the head and tail seem to flip up from the side of the ova and the main part of the egg becomes the tummy and body of the baby fish.
Teratogenic drugs are those efeect the progress of fetus or embrio
'cos the seed contains the embrio.
Alright, please disreguard the other "answer". They take a DNA sample from the organism that is to be cloned. Then they take an embrio from an animal the same species as the animal that will be cloned. Then they extract DNA from the embrio and replace it with the DNA sample from the animal that's going to be cloned. Then they place it back in the womb or uterus of the animal the embrio belongs to. It's not really cloning like what you see on the science fiction channel, that's why it's science fiction.
No. The enormous majority of seeds (from Spermatophyta) are the product of a sexual reproduction which mean the containing embrio is a unique individual.
fruit form after a flower has been pollinated and fertilized. the fruit is the equevalent to human pregnancy and the seed/s are the embrio (babies)
In the case of fish they don't actually "come out" of the egg. The embrio develops as the head develops at one end and the tail develops at the other. The round bit of the egg that is left becomes the tummy part of the fish. As to how long this takes. Different species take different lengths of time and they all vary depending upon the prevailing temperature at the time.