The release of eggs from the ovary is known as ovulation.
Ovulation will typically occur around two weeks into the menstrual cycle, although everyone is different and unless using fertility awareness method or ovulation testing kits you may not know when ovulation occurs. Around the week prior to ovulation there is fertile cervical mucus, a clear stretchy fluid that helps keep sperm alive in the vagina so it can reach the egg, which is an indication of upcoming ovulation.
The ovary releases an egg during the process of ovulation.
Follicles
To release an egg from the ovary
Both the right and left ovaries can produce egg cells, but typically, one ovary alternates each month to release an egg during the menstrual cycle. This means that in one cycle, the right ovary may release an egg, and in the next cycle, the left ovary might do so. Over time, both ovaries contribute to egg production.
Yes, sex hormones like estrogen and luteinizing hormone (LH) play a key role in the release of the egg from the ovary. LH surge triggers ovulation, causing the mature egg to be released from the ovarian follicle.
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The ovary doesn't get fertilised. The ovaries produce egg cells and release them into the fallopian tubes.
Ovulation is the term for the release of a mature egg from the ovary. Menstruation typically occurs two weeks later.
An egg doesn't turn into an ovary. The ovary is the area from which the egg is released during ovulation.
the ovary does not become fertilized and remains an ovary. if you mean the egg, it becomes a Zygote.
ovary
in the ovary