So let's go over how this all works with human people. And of course, ladies first. As you know, the gonads have a female embryo turn into two ovaries, one on either side of the uterus with its oviducts or fallopian tubes reaching out toward them. The ovaries are where those precious eggs are kept.
Therefore, all reproductive systems in reproductive behavior are designed entirely around the production, storage, and delivery of these gametes. For instance, because sperm are really mobile, males within a species are generally the more mobile ones who go out to find a mate. This is even true for plants.
As you know, the gonads have a female embryo turn into two ovaries, one on either side of the uterus with its oviducts or fallopian tubes reaching out toward them. The ovaries are where those precious eggs are kept.
Maybe the biggest difference between women's and men's reproductive setup is that women have a menstrual cycle, typically a four week process in which one egg matures in an ovary and is released to be drawn into the fallopian tubes, a process called ovulation.
The two major functions of the gonads in the adult are steroid hormone production and gametogenesis. Reproductive hormones are also pivotal in sexual differentiation, fetal development, growth and sexual maturation.
Gonadal hormones – nearly always synonymous with gonadal steroids – are hormones produced by the gonads, and include both steroid and peptide hormones. The major steroid hormones include estradiol and progesterone from the ovaries, and testosterone from the testes.
The gonads, the primary reproductive organs, are the testes in the male and the ovaries in the female. These organs are responsible for producing the sperm and ova, but they also secrete hormones and are considered to be endocrine glands.
The female gonads, the ovaries, are a pair of reproductive glands. They are located in the pelvis, one on each side of the uterus, and they have two functions: They produce eggs and female hormones.
The gonads produce gametes (eggs or sperm) which unite during fertilization. They also produce steroid hormones essential for reproduction as well the growth and development of the entire body.
Ovaries are the female gonads — the primary female reproductive organs. These glands have three important functions: they secrete hormones, they protect the eggs a female is born with and they release eggs for possible fertilization.
Definition of gonad : a reproductive gland (such as an ovary or testis) that produces gametes.
Some women have testes, organs that produce testosterone, because they are trans women or they have an intersex state.
Gonads are male and female sex glands. They produce both sex hormones and sex cells. In the male, the interstitial cells of the testes produce and secrete the male sex hormone testosterone. This controls the development and function of the male secondary sex organs, as well as the secondary sexual characteristics.
gonad, in zoology, primary reproductive gland that produces reproductive cells (gametes). In males the gonads are called testes; the gonads in females are called ovaries. (see ovary; testis).
Gonads are the sites (or organs) where gametes are produced. Gonads of the male are called testes, whereas gametes of the male are called sperms. Gonads of the female are called ovaries, whereas gametes of the female are called ova. Gonads are the organs, whereas gametes are the haploid sex cells.
A gonad, sex gland, or reproductive gland is a mixed gland that produces the gametes and sex hormones of an organism. Female reproductive cells are egg cells, and male reproductive cells are sperm. The male gonad, the testicle, produces sperm in the form of spermatozoa. The female gonad, the ovary, produces egg cells.
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