Human Reproduction (Male Reproductive System) Flashcards

1
Q

What species won’t mate during only their fertile periods?

A

Homo Sapiens

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2
Q

What is estrus “heat”?

A

It’s when females of almost all species except for Homo Sapiens mate during their fertile period. It lasts from a few hours to several weeks. 4-5 days mice. Once a year - wolves.

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3
Q

Why did humans mate during their non fertile periods?

A

The speculation is that it was because of maintaining pair bonds.

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4
Q

What are gametes?

A

Eggs or sperm

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5
Q

How are gametes produced?

A

The process of meiosis in the sex organs or gonads

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6
Q

What are the sex organs or gonads?

A

Ovaries or testes

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7
Q

What are the gonads responsible for?

A

Gametogenesis and the production of sex hormones (estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone)

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8
Q

Humans don’t reproduce in what way?

A

Asexually (cloning)

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9
Q

How are the male gametes produced?

A

By 500 meters of coiled seminiferous tubules within the paired testes.

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10
Q

What is Spermatogenesis?

A

Sperm Production

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11
Q

Where does Spermatogenesis occur?

A

Continuously in the walls of the seminiferous tubules

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12
Q

How long does it take for a single spermatozoon to produce?

A

8-9 weeks

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13
Q

How much ejaculation is considered to cause infertility? What is normal?

A

Less than 100 million sperm per ejaculation. 300-400 is normal.

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14
Q

The tubules will have how much spermatozoa in production at any given time?

A

Couple billion

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15
Q

What is the individual spermatozoon highly specialized for?

A

Delivering its genetic payload

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16
Q

What does the spermatozoon consist of?

A

Nucleus (w/genetic information, flagellum for mobility, a mitochondrion (to supply energy) modified lysosome (acrosome) at its head.

17
Q

What does the acrosome contain?

A

Powerful hydrolytic enzymes that will enable the sperm to digest its way through cervical mucus and the protective coating around the egg.

18
Q

How long can ejaculated sperm survive? What are the odds?

A

Up to 5 days. The odds are there won’t be enough survivors to accomplish fertilization after 48 hours.

19
Q

How are immature spermatozoa transported?

A

From the seminiferous tubules immature spermatozoa are transported to a 7 meter long coiled tube called the epididymis.

20
Q

Where is the epididymis located?

A

Backpack-like sac on the testis.

21
Q

What does the epididymis store and for how long?

A

Sperm for up to 3 months.

22
Q

During intercourse how does sperm move?

A

Sperm moves through the vas deferens which extend up into the body cavity, over the top of the unitary bladder, and backdown to the seminal vesicles just behind the bladder.

23
Q

What do seminal vesicles produce?

A

A secretion containing fructose which nourishes sperm, and prostaglandins which cause muscular contractions in the uterus and fallopian tubes which may help sperm reach egg.

24
Q

Where does the fructose and prostaglandins enter?

A

Prostate gland

25
Q

What does the prostate gland contribute?

A

Milky alkaline fluid that helps to neutralize the acidic female reproductive tract.

26
Q

At the prostate gland, what does the vas deferens join?

A

The urethra or Cowper’s Glands, which runs from the urinary bladder through the prostate, and out through the shaft of the penis.

27
Q

Where is the bulbourethral (or Cowper’s) glands located?

A

On the urethra at the base of the penis

28
Q

What do the Cowper’s glands contribute?

A

A mucoid secretion that may facilitate the movement of seminal fluid through the remainder of the urethra.

29
Q

What makes up the seminal fluid/semen?

A

Sperm, secretions of seminal vesicles, prostate and Cowper’s Glands make up the seminal fluid or semen. 3-6 millimeters per ejaculation.

30
Q

How is an erection accomplished? What mammals don’t utilize this method?

A

Blood flowing into spongy erectile tissues, the twin corpora cavernosa and the single corpus spongiosum.

Bats and walruses don’t utilize this method, they have a penis bone instead (os penis or baculum)

31
Q

How does the testes descend?

A

From the body cavity into the scrotum during the ninth month of fetal life. It is essential because human body temperature is too warm for normal spermatogenesis.

32
Q

Who do cremaster muscles do?

A

In the adult male cremaster muscles raise or lower the testes depending on the environmental temperature.

33
Q

What results in overheated testes and impaired spermatogenesis?

A

Tight underwear, hot spas, and undescended testes (cyrptochidism) can result in overheated testes and impaired spermatogenesis.

34
Q

What is castration?

A

Removal of the testes which removes the source of testosterone production and that hormone’s effects

35
Q

What is a vasectomy?

A

Male sterilization operation, vas deferens cut or tied - blocks release of sperm.

36
Q

Where is testosterone produced?

A

Interstitial cells that are scattered between and outside of the seminiferous tubules

37
Q

Where is testosterone secreted?

A

Directly into blood capillaries within the testes and carried through veins from the scrotum. The blood flow (testosterone delivery) is not disrupted by cutting off and tying the vas deferens.

38
Q

What are the effects of Testosterone?

A

Maturation and development of sex organs, body hair, thickening of the skin, hypertrophy - enlargement of larynx (voice box) increasing glandular secretion - including sweat and body odor, hypertrophy of bone and muscle (the tissue-building or anabolic effect) an increase in metabolic rate, and expression of the male pattern baldness gene.