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 cell begin in the ovaries, and then move through the fallopian tubes to the uterus.
Egg cells will travel through the Fallopian, or uterine, tube to the uterus where it will implant if it was fertilized.
The fallopian tubes.
The male gametes (sperm cells) travel down the pollen tube to fertilize the female gametes (egg cells) located in the pistil. This process is essential for sexual reproduction in plants.
Yes, egg cells have enzymes called hyaluronidases that help break down the cell membrane of the egg. This allows sperm to penetrate the egg during fertilization.
An egg cannot travel from the ovary to the anus. An egg, however, DOES travel from the ovary, to the fallopian tube, down into the uterus. If fertilized, the egg will implant in the uterine wall. If unfertilized, the egg will be discharged during the menstrual flow.
The largest cells in length are the nerve cells that run down an animal's leg and in volume an Ostrich egg is a cell.
The egg begins in the ovaries. Once an egg leaves an ovum it then travels down the fallopian tubes, then to implant in your uterus for 3 weeks and wait for fertiliztion.
Sperm duct and urethra.
The answer is no. The anther contains pollen which contains sperm cells. Mainly through pollination, the pollen from the anther travels down the pistil, and meets the egg where it fertilizes the egg.
yes. it does forms egg cells