Growing follicles in the ovaries secrete small amounts of oestrogen in to the blood.
Eggs only move from the ovaries to the uterus. They never move from one ovary to the other ovary.
It's called a fallopian tube. It attached from the ovary to the uterus, it's where the eggs travel through.
Yes, the ovary, uterus, and cervix are all part of the female reproductive system. The ovary is where eggs are produced, the uterus is where a fertilized egg implants and grows into a fetus, and the cervix is the lower part of the uterus that connects to the vagina.
Ovary 2nd Answer: No, not the ovary . . . the baby is in the womb, also called the uterus. (YOU-tuhr-uss) The ovary contains human eggs, each one of which could be fertilized and turn into a baby, but the eggs are not babys.
Ovaries produce eggs which travel to the uterus. There they will either get fertilized by sperm or the the uterus will shed its lining, which causes a period.
The fallopian tube is the tube that carries eggs from the ovary to the uterus. It is where fertilization typically occurs when sperm meets the egg.
The fallopian tubes convey an egg from the ovary to the uterus.
Vagina - the hole in ur butt from the outside Uterus - "storage area" Fallopian Tubes - tubes linking to uterus Ovary- eggs
The fallopian tube is the organ that transports the ovum from the ovary to the uterus for potential fertilization.
When an egg is released from an ovary (only one side each month), it is directed into the Fallopian Tube on the same side. The Fallopian Tubes (one side each month) is the passage way that eggs travel from the ovaries (one each month) to the uterus.
No no uterus means no menstruation. If you retain even one ovary you may still get premenstrual pains etc.
Fetuses do not come from the ovaries, a female's eggs come from the ovaries. Fetuses come from the uterus.