It acts like a cushion so it stops the baby from hurting its self inside the mothers tummy
a developing fetus receives nourishment from the placenta, which is burrowed into the uterus
A developing fetus is supplied with its needs for metabolism and growth from the mother via the placenta.
To hold the growing fetus .
Everything the fetus needs is provided by the placenta.
The carbon dioxide produced by a developing fetus is removed by the mother's placenta. The placenta facilitates the exchange of gases between the mother and the fetus, allowing the carbon dioxide to be carried away in the mother's bloodstream and eliminated through her own respiratory system.
That anchoring structure is called the placenta.
through the placenta and umbilical cord
The placenta connects a developing fetus to the wall of the uterus, which allows gas exchange, nutrient absorption, and waste elimination
The placenta being attached to both the mother and the fetus, provide important benefits, such as supplying nutrients to the fetus, eliminating waste, and gas exchange.
the fetus is the baby and the placenta is how the baby gets nutrients or food while in the womb, there is a tube that connects from the placenta to the fetus bellybutton
The space inside the uterus is important as it provides a suitable environment for a fertilized egg to implant and develop into a fetus. It also allows for the expansion of the uterus to accommodate the growing fetus during pregnancy. Additionally, the space inside the uterus is where the placenta forms to nourish the developing fetus.
The placenta is an organ that connects the developing fetus to the uterine wall. The placenta supplies the fetus with oxygen and food, and allows fetal waste to be disposed via the maternal kidneys. The placenta develops from the same sperm and egg cells that form the fetus, and functions as a fetomaternal organ with two components, the fetal part (Chorion frondosum), and the maternal part (Decidua basalis).