Since one bull, on average, gives 7 ml of semen in an ejaculation, 14 x 0.5 ml straws or 28 x 0.25 ml straws can come from one ejaculation from a bull.
by itselfClarification:Sperm is in the semen, which is ejaculated when sexual climax is reached.
It's called 'semen' (see-men) and it has sperm in it. The semen can be made to come out forcefully during an ejaculation, part of the sex act. If you can not ejaculate yet it is probably because you are not old enough and haven't got that far in your development yet. it usually starts around pre-puberty from the age of 10 and around. That is when semen can come out but semen does not contain sperms until you have reached puberty.
Your testicles supply the sperm and the prostate secretes the carrier fluid.
Well, yes, but it is called, "Semen", which in boys is a clear to milky liquid that contains spermatazoa, or just sperm cells.
no... they are like 2 tubes run seperatly. One running pee and the other running sperm and semen.
The urethra is responsible for ejaculating sperm and expelling urine in men.
Yes it does. It contain taurine which is basically bull semen, or parts of the semen. Although it can come from any other male cattle. So yes it does
It feels a lot different, you can tell as wee is a lot thinner compared to semen, so if it takes longer to come out, it is 99% of the time semen
That should be "... your semen does not come out". (Semen is the liquid that the tiny sperm cells swim around in.) You could have retrograde ejaculation, which means that the semen and sperm go backwards toward or into the urinary bladder instead of coming out. This is much more likely if it turns out that you are taking certain drugs, like certain families of anti-depressants. Or (and much more likely) your body simply may have not gone through puberty, yet.
Cheese Straws come Guyana. It's a Guyanese recipe. I'm Guyanese so I know.
sperm can survive in the female for up to 48 hours it usually takes 24 hours for them to find the egg
Orgasm triggers the process that forces the sperm come out. Sperm is actually invisible, so what you can see and feel coming out is actually semen (which contains the sperm). Rhythmic contractions inside the man's internal reproductive anatomy are triggered by orgasm. These contractions force seminal fluid, sperm and other components into the urethra in pulses. This is why when a man ejaculates, the semen is forced out the penis hole in a series of squirts. The first one or two squirts contain the most semen (and sperm), and then each successive squirt is smaller and weaker until the contractions stop or the available fluids in the man are "spent". As men age, the squirts tend to become weaker (might just be a dribble) and the quantity and quality (potency) of the semen may decrease.