Biology Project Class XII

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SWAMI DHANANJOY DAS

KATHIA BABA MISSION SCHOOL

Patunagar, Agartala
Aissce – 2021-2022

PROJECT ON BIOLOGY
TOPIC : HUMAN REPRODUCTION.

Submitted by :
Name : Abroy Majumder
Class : XII(Science),
Roll No. 02
Reg. No. 2020-21/1615

Guided by : Susovan Sir,


INTRODUCTION
What Is the Reproductive System?
The reproductive system is the human organ system responsible for the production
and fertilization of gametes (sperm or eggs) and carrying of a fetus. Both both
sexes gonads produce gametes. A gamete is a haploidcell that combines with another
haploidgamete during fertilization, forming a single diploid cell called a zygote. Besides
producing gametes, the gonads also produce sex hormones. Sex hormones are
endocrine hormones that control the development of sex organs before birth, sexual
maturation at puberty, and reproduction once sexual maturation has occurred.
Other reproductive system organs have various functions, such as maturing gametes,
delivering gametes to the site of fertilization, and providing an environment for the
development and growth of offspring.

Sex Differences in the Reproductive System


The reproductive system is the only human organ system that is significantly different
between males and females. Embryonic structures that will develop into the
reproductive system start out the same in males and females, but by birth, the
reproductive systems have differentiated. How does this happen?

Sex Differentiation

Starting around the seventh week after conception in genetically male (XY) embryos,
a gene called SRY on the Y chromosome (in the given figure below) initiates the
production of multiple proteins. These proteins cause undifferentiated gonadal tissue to
develop into testes. Testes secrete hormones — including testosterone — that trigger
other changes in the developing offspring (now called a fetus), causing it to develop a
complete male reproductive system. Without a Y chromosome, an embryo will develop
ovaries, that will produce estrogen. Estrogen, in turn, will lead to the formation of the
other organs of a female reproductive system.
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The SRY gene on the short arm of the Y chromosome causes the undifferentiated
gonads of an embryo to develop into testes. Otherwise, the gonads develop into
ovaries.

Homologous Structures

Undifferentiated embryonic tissues develop into different structures in male and female
fetuses. Structures that arise from the same tissues in males and females are
called homologous structures. The testes and ovaries, for example, are homologous
structures that develop from the undifferentiated gonads of the embryo. Likewise,
the penis and clitoris are homologous structures that develop from the same embryonic
tissues.

Sex Hormones and Maturation

Male and female reproductive systems are different at birth, but they are immature and
incapable of producing gametes or sex hormones. Maturation of the reproductive
system occurs during puberty when hormones from the hypothalamus and pituitary
gland stimulate the testes or ovaries to start producing sex hormones again. The main
sex hormones are testosterone and estrogen. Sex hormones, in turn, lead to the
growth and maturation of the reproductive organs, rapid body growth, and the
development of secondary sex characteristics, such as body and facial hair and
breasts.

Role of Sex Hormones in Transgender Treatment

Feminizing or masculinizing hormone therapy is the administration of exogenous


endocrine agents to induce changes in physical appearance. Since hormone therapy is
inexpensive relative to surgery and highly effective in the development of secondary sex
characteristics (e.g., facial and body hair in female-to-male [FTM] individuals or
breast tissue in male-to-females [MTFs]), hormone therapy is often the first, and
sometimes only, medical gender affirmation intervention accessed by transgender
individuals looking to develop masculine or feminine characteristics consistent with their
gender identity. In some cases, hormone therapy may be required before surgical
interventions can be conducted. Trans-females are prescribed estrogen and anti-
testosterone medication, such as cyproterone acetate and spironolactone. Trans-men
are prescribed testosterone.
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Male Reproductive System


The main structures of the male reproductive system are external to the body . The two
testes (singular, testis) hang between the thighs in a sac of skin called the scrotum. The
testes produce both sperm and testosterone. Resting atop each testis is a coiled
structure called the epididymis (plural epididymes). The function of the epididymes is to
mature and store sperm. The penis is a tubular organ that contains the urethra and has
the ability to stiffen during sexual arousal. Sperm passes out of the body through
the urethra during a sexual climax (orgasm). This release of sperm is called ejaculation.
In addition to these organs, there are several ducts and glands that are internal to the
body. The ducts, which include the vas deferens (also called the ductus deferens),
transport sperm from the epididymis to the urethra. The glands, which include
the prostate gland and seminal vesicles, produce fluids that become part of semen
Semen is the fluid that carries sperm through the urethra and out of the body. It
contains substances that control pH and provide sperm with nutrients for energy.

Female Reproductive System


The main organs of the female reproductive system lie within the abdominal cavity. Pay
attention to ovaries, uterine tube, uterus, cervix, and vagina. The main structures of the
female reproductive system are internal to the body . They include the paired ovaries,
which are small, oval structures that produce eggs and secrete estrogen. The two
Fallopian tubes (aka uterine tubes) start near the ovaries and end at the uterus. Their
function is to transport eggs from the ovaries to the uterus. If an egg is fertilized, it
usually occurs while it is traveling through a Fallopian tube. The uterus is a pear-shaped
muscular organ that functions to carry a fetus until birth. It can expand greatly to
accommodate a growing fetus, and its muscular walls can contract forcefully during
labor to push the baby into the vagina. The vagina is a tubular tract connecting the
uterus to the outside of the body. The vagina is where sperm are usually deposited
during sexual intercourse and ejaculation. The vagina is also called the birth canal
because a baby travels through the vagina to leave the body during birth. The external
structures of the female reproductive system are referred to collectively as the vulva.
They include the clitoris, which is homologous to the male penis. They also include two
pairs of labia (singular, labium), which surround and protect the openings of
the urethra and vagina.

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Human reproductive system

Male And Female Reproductive Systems

Human reproductive system, organ system by which humans reproduce and


bear live offspring. Provided all organs are present, normally constructed, and
functioning properly, the essential features of human reproduction are (1) liberation of
an ovum, or egg, at a specific time in the reproductive cycle, (2) internal fertilization of
the ovum by spermatozoa, or sperm cells, (3) transport of the fertilized ovum to
the uterus, or womb, (4) implantation of the blastocyst, the early embryo developed
from the fertilized ovum, in the wall of the uterus, (5) formation of a placenta and
maintenance of the unborn child during the entire period of gestation, (6) birth of the
child and expulsion of the placenta, and (7) suckling and care of the child, with an
eventual return of the maternal organs to virtually their original state.

For this biological process to be carried out, certain organs and structures are
required in both the male and the female. The source of the ova (the female germ cells)
is the female ovary; that of spermatozoa (the male germ cells) is the testis. In females,
the two ovaries are situated in the pelvic cavity; in males, the two testes are enveloped in
a sac of skin, the scrotum, lying below and outside the abdomen. Besides producing the
germ cells, or gametes, the ovaries and testes are the source of hormones that cause full
development of secondary sexual characteristics and also the proper functioning of the
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reproductive tracts. These tracts comprise the fallopian tubes, the uterus, the vagina,
and associated structures in females and the penis, the sperm channels
(epididymis, ductus deferens, and ejaculatory ducts), and other related structures and
glands in males. The function of the fallopian tube is to convey an ovum, which is
fertilized in the tube, to the uterus, where gestation (development before birth) takes
place. The function of the male ducts is to convey spermatozoa from the testis, to store
them, and, when ejaculation occurs, to eject them with secretions from the male glands
through the penis.

Female Reproductive System


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Male Reproductive System


At copulation, or sexual intercourse, the erect penis is inserted into the vagina,
and spermatozoa contained in the seminal fluid (semen) are ejaculated into the female
genital tract. Spermatozoa then pass from the vagina through the uterus to the fallopian
tube to fertilize the ovum in the outer part of the tube. Females exhibit a periodicity in
the activity of their ovaries and uterus, which starts at puberty and ends at
the menopause. The periodicity is manifested by menstruation at intervals of about 28
days; important changes occur in the ovaries and uterus during each reproductive, or
menstrual, cycle. Periodicity, and subsequently menstruation, is suppressed during
pregnancy and lactation.

This articles describes the organs, both male and female, that are involved in
human reproduction. The reproductive process itself is covered in other articles. For a
detailed discussion of the series of changes that occur in a woman’s body as her fetus
develops, see pregnancy. For a description of the stages of labour and
delivery, see parturition. For the development of the unborn child during
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gestation, see human embryology. For coverage of the many diseases and disorders that
can affect the reproductive organs.

Development of the reproductive organs:


The sex of a child is determined at the time of fertilization of the ovum by
the spermatozoon. The differences between a male and a female are genetically
determined by the chromosomes that each possesses in the nuclei of the cells. Once the
genetic sex has been determined, there normally follows a succession of changes that
will result, finally, in the development of an adult male or female. There is, however, no
external indication of the sex of an embryo during the first eight weeks of its life within
the uterus. This is a neutral or indifferent stage during which the sex of an embryo can
be ascertained only by examination of the chromosomes in its cells.

The next phase, one of differentiation, begins first in gonads that are to become
testes and a week or so later in those destined to be ovaries. Embryos of the two sexes
are initially alike in possessing similar duct systems linking the undifferentiated gonads
with the exterior and in having similar external genitalia, represented by three simple
protuberances. The embryos each have four ducts, the subsequent fate of which is of
great significance in the eventual anatomical differences between men and women. Two
ducts closely related to the developing urinary system are called mesonephric,
or wolffian, ducts. In males each mesonephric duct becomes differentiated into four
related structures: a duct of the epididymis, a ductus deferens, an ejaculatory duct, and
a seminal vesicle. In females the mesonephric ducts are largely suppressed. The other
two ducts, called the paramesonephric or müllerian ducts, persist, in females, to develop
into the fallopian tubes, the uterus, and part of the vagina; in males they are largely
suppressed. Differentiation also occurs in the primitive external genitalia, which in
males become the penis and scrotum and in females the vulva (the clitoris, labia, and
vestibule of the vagina).
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External Genitalia

At birth the organs appropriate to each sex have developed and are in their adult
positions but are not functioning. Various abnormalities can occur during development
of sex organs in embryos, leading to hermaphroditism, pseudohermaphroditism, and
other chromosomally induced conditions. During childhood until puberty there is
steady growth in all reproductive organs and a gradual development of
activity. Puberty marks the onset of increased activity in the sex glands and the steady
development of secondary sexual characteristics.

In males at puberty the testes enlarge and become active, the external genitalia
enlarge, and the capacity to ejaculate develops. Marked changes in height and weight
occur as hormonal secretion from the testes increases. The larynx, or voice box,
enlarges, with resultant deepening of the voice. Certain features in the skeleton, as seen
in the pelvic bones and skull, become accentuated. The hair in the armpits and the pubic
hair becomes abundant and thicker. Facial hair develops, as well as hair on the chest,
abdomen, and limbs. Hair at the temples recedes. Skin glands become more active,
especially apocrine glands (a type of sweat gland that is found in the armpits and groin
and around the anus).
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In females at puberty, the external genitalia enlarge and the uterus commences
its periodic activity with menstruation. The breasts develop, and there is a deposition of
body fat in accordance with the usual contours of the mature female. Growth of axillary
(armpit) and pubic hair is more abundant, and the hair becomes thicker.

The male reproductive system


The male gonads are the testes; they are the source of spermatozoa and also of
male sex hormones called androgens. The other genital organs are the epididymides; the
ductus, or vasa, deferentia; the seminal vesicles; the ejaculatory ducts; and the penis; as
well as certain accessory structures, such as the prostate and the bulbourethral (Cowper)
glands. The principal functions of these structures are to transport the spermatozoa
from the testes to the exterior, to allow their maturation on the way, and to provide
certain secretions that help form the semen.

External genitalia
The penis:
The penis, the male organ of copulation, is partly inside and partly outside the
body. The inner part, attached to the bony margins of the pubic arch (that part of the
pelvis directly in front and at the base of the trunk), is called the root of the penis. The
second, or outer, portion is free, pendulous, and enveloped all over in skin; it is termed
the body of the penis. The organ is composed chiefly of cavernous or erectile tissue that
becomes engorged with blood to produce considerable enlargement and erection. The
penis is traversed by a tube, the urethra, which serves as a passage both for urine and for
semen.
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Human Penis
The body of the penis, sometimes referred to as the shaft, is cylindrical in shape
when flaccid but when erect is somewhat triangular in cross section, with the angles
rounded. This condition arises because the right corpus cavernosum and the left corpus
cavernosum, the masses of erectile tissue, lie close together in the dorsal part of the
penis, while a single body, the corpus spongiosum, which contains the urethra, lies in a
midline groove on the undersurface of the corpora cavernosa. The dorsal surface of the
penis is that which faces upward and backward during erection.

The slender corpus spongiosum reaches beyond the extremities of the erectile
corpora cavernosa and at its outer end is enlarged considerably to form a soft, conical,
sensitive structure called the glans penis. The base of the glans has a projecting margin,
the corona, and the groove where the corona overhangs the corpora cavernosa is
referred to as the neck of the penis. The glans is traversed by the urethra, which ends in
a vertical, slitlike, external opening. The skin over the penis is thin and loosely adherent
and at the neck is folded forward over the glans for a variable distance to form the
prepuce or foreskin. A median fold, the frenulum of the prepuce, passes to the
undersurface of the glans to reach a point just behind the urethral opening. The prepuce
can usually be readily drawn back to expose the glans.
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The root of the penis comprises two crura, or projections, and the bulb of the
penis. The crura and the bulb are attached respectively to the edges of the pubic arch
and to the perineal membrane (the fibrous membrane that forms a floor of the trunk).
Each crus is an elongated structure covered by the ischiocavernosus muscle, and each
extends forward, converging toward the other, to become continuous with one of the
corpora cavernosa. The oval bulb of the penis lies between the two crura and is covered
by the bulbospongiosus muscle. It is continuous with the corpus spongiosum. The
urethra enters it on the flattened deep aspect that lies against the perineal
membrane, traverses its substances, and continues into the corpus spongiosum.

The two corpora cavernosa are close to one another, separated only by a partition
in the fibrous sheath that encloses them. The erectile tissue of the corpora is divided by
numerous small fibrous bands into many cavernous spaces, relatively empty when the
penis is flaccid but engorged with blood during erection. The structure of the tissue of
the corpus spongiosum is similar to that of the corpora cavernosa, but there is
more smooth muscle and elastic tissue. A deep fascia, or sheet of connective tissue,
surrounding the structures in the body of the penis is prolonged to form the suspensory
ligament, which anchors the penis to the pelvic bones at the midpoint of the pubic arch.

The penis has a rich blood supply from the internal pudendal artery, a branch of
the internal iliac artery, which supplies blood to the pelvic structures and organs, the
buttocks, and the inside of the thighs. Erection is brought about by distension of the
cavernous spaces with blood, which is prevented from draining away by compression of
the veins in the area.

The penis is amply supplied with sensory and autonomic (involuntary) nerves. Of
the autonomic nerve fibres the sympathetic fibres cause constriction of blood vessels,
and the parasympathetic fibres cause their dilation. It is usually stated
that ejaculation is brought about by the sympathetic system, which at the same
time inhibits the desire to urinate and also prevents the semen from entering the
bladder.

The Scrotum
The scrotum is a pouch of skin lying below the pubic symphysis and just in front
of the upper parts of the thighs. It contains the testes and lowest parts of the spermatic
cord. A scrotal septum or partition divides the pouch into two compartments and arises
from a ridge, or raphe, visible on the outside of the scrotum. The raphe turns forward
onto the undersurface of the penis and is continued back onto the perineum (the area
between the legs and as far back as the anus). This arrangement indicates the bilateral
origin of the scrotum from two genital swellings that lie one on each side of the base of
the phallus, the precursor of the penis or clitoris in the embryo. The swellings are also
referred to as the labioscrotal swellings, because in females they remain separate to
form the labia majora and in males they unite to form the scrotum.
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The skin of the scrotum is thin, pigmented, devoid of fatty tissue, and more or
less folded and wrinkled. There are some scattered hairs and sebaceous glands on its
surface. Below the skin is a layer of involuntary muscle, the dartos, which can alter the
appearance of the scrotum. On exposure of the scrotum to cold air or cold water, the
dartos contracts and gives the scrotum a shortened, corrugated appearance; warmth
causes the scrotum to become smoother, flaccid, and less closely tucked in around the
testes. Beneath the dartos muscle are layers of fascia continuous with those forming the
coverings of each of the two spermatic cords, which suspend the testes within the
scrotum and contain each ductus deferens, the testicular blood and lymph vessels, the
artery to the cremaster muscle (which draws the testes upward), the artery to each
ductus deferens, the genital branch of the genitofemoral nerve, and the testicular
network of nerves.

The scrotum is supplied with blood by the external pudendal branches of


the femoral artery, which is the chief artery of the thigh, and by the scrotal branches of
the internal pudendal artery. The veins follow the arteries. The lymphatic drainage is to
the lymph nodes in the groin.

The testes:
The two testes, or testicles, which usually complete their descent into
the scrotum from their point of origin on the back wall of the abdomen in the seventh
month after conception, are suspended in the scrotum by the spermatic cords. Each
testis is 4 to 5 cm (about 1.5 to 2 inches) long and is enclosed in a fibrous sac, the tunica
albuginea. This sac is lined internally by the tunica vasculosa, containing a network of
blood vessels, and is covered by the tunica vaginalis, which is a continuation of the
membrane that lines the abdomen and pelvis. The tunica albuginea has extensions into
each testis that act as partial partitions to divide the testis into approximately 250
compartments, or lobules.
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Male Reproductive Organs

Each lobule contains one or more convoluted tubules, or narrow tubes,


where sperm are formed. The tubules, if straightened, would extend about 70 cm (about
28 inches). The multistage process of sperm formation, which takes about 60 days, goes
on in the lining of the tubules, starting with the spermatogonia, or primitive sperm cells,
in the outermost layer of the lining. Spermatozoa (sperm) leaving the tubules are not
capable of independent motion, but they undergo a further maturation process in the
ducts of the male reproductive tract; the process may be continued when,
after ejaculation, they pass through the female tract. Maturation of the sperm in the
female tract is called capacitation.

Each spermatozoon is a slender elongated structure with a head, a neck, a middle


piece, and a tail. The head contains the cell nucleus. When the spermatozoon is fully
mature, it is propelled by the lashing movements of the tail.

The male sex hormone testosterone is produced by Leydig cells. These cells are
located in the connective (interstitial) tissue that holds the tubules together within each
lobule. The tissue becomes markedly active at puberty under the influence of the
interstitial-cell-stimulating hormone of the anterior lobe of the pituitary gland; this
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hormone in women is called luteinizing hormone. Testosterone stimulates the male
accessory sex glands (prostate, seminal vesicles) and also brings about the development
of male secondary sex characteristics at puberty. The hormone may also be necessary to
cause maturation of sperm and to heighten the sex drive of the male. The testis is also
the source of some of the female sex hormone estrogen, which may exert an influence on
pituitary activity.

Each testis is supplied with blood by the testicular arteries, which arise from the
front of the aorta just below the origin of the renal (kidney) arteries. Each artery crosses
the rear abdominal wall, enters the spermatic cord, passes through the inguinal canal,
and enters the upper end of each testis at the back. The veins leaving the testis and
epididymis form a network, which ascends into the spermatic cord. The lymph vessels,
which also pass through the spermatic cord, drain to the lateral and preaortic lymph
nodes. Nerve fibres to the testis accompany the vessels; they pass through the renal and
aortic nerve plexuses, or networks.
Structures of the Sperm Canal
The epididymis, ductus deferens (or vas deferens), and ejaculatory ducts form the
sperm canal. Together they extend from the testis to the urethra, where it lies within the
prostate. Sperm are conveyed from the testis along some 20 ductules, or small ducts,
which pierce the fibrous capsule to enter the head of the epididymis. The ductules are
straight at first but become dilated and then much convoluted to form distinct
compartments within the head of the epididymis. They each open into a single duct, the
highly convoluted duct of the epididymis, which constitutes the “body” and “tail” of the
structure. It is held together by connective tissue but if unraveled would be nearly 6
metres (20 feet) long. The duct enlarges and becomes thicker-walled at the lower end of
the tail of the epididymis, where it becomes continuous with the ductus deferens.

The ductules from the testis have a thin muscular coat and a lining that consists
of alternating groups of high columnar cells with cilia (hairlike projections) and low cells
lacking cilia. The cilia assist in moving sperm toward the epididymis. In the duct of the
epididymis the muscle coat is thicker and the lining is thick with tufts of large nonmotile
cilia. There is some evidence that the ductules and the first portion of the duct of the
epididymis remove excess fluid and extraneous debris from the testicular secretions
entering these tubes. The blood supply to the epididymis is by a branch from the
testicular artery given off before that vessel reaches the testis.

The ductus deferens, or vas deferens, is the continuation of the duct of the
epididymis. It commences at the lower part of the tail of the epididymis and ascends
along the back border of the testis to its upper pole. Then, as part of the spermatic cord,
it extends to the deep inguinal ring. Separating from the other elements of the spermatic
cord—the blood vessels, nerves, and lymph vessels—at the ring, the ductus deferens
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makes its way through the pelvis toward the base of the prostate, where it is joined by
the seminal vesicle to form the ejaculatory duct. A part of the ductus that is dilated and
rather tortuous, near the base of the urinary bladder, is called the ampulla.

The ductus deferens has a thick coat of smooth muscle that gives it a
characteristic cordlike feel. The longitudinal muscle fibres are well developed, and
peristaltic contractions (contractions in waves) move the sperm toward the ampulla.
The mucous membrane lining the interior is in longitudinal folds and is mostly covered
with nonciliated columnar cells, although some cells have nonmotile cilia. The ampulla
is thinner-walled and probably acts as a sperm store.

Accessory organs
The prostate gland, seminal vesicles
and bulbourethral glands:
These structures provide secretions to form the bulk of the seminal fluid of an
ejaculate. The prostate gland is in the lesser or true pelvis, centred behind the lower part
of the pubic arch. It lies in front of the rectum. The prostate is shaped roughly like an
inverted pyramid; its base is directed upward and is immediately continuous with the
neck of the urinary bladder. The urethra traverses its substance. The two ejaculatory
ducts enter the prostate near the upper border of its posterior surface. The prostate is of
a firm consistency, surrounded by a capsule of fibrous tissue and smooth muscle. It
measures about 4 cm across, 3 cm in height, and 2 cm front to back (about 1.6 by 1.2 by
0.8 inch) and consists of glandular tissue contained in a muscular framework. It is
imperfectly divided into three lobes. Two lobes at the side form the main mass and are
continuous behind the urethra. In front of the urethra they are connected by an isthmus
of fibromuscular tissue devoid of glands. The third, or median, lobe is smaller and
variable in size and may lack glandular tissue. There are three clinically significant
concentric zones of prostatic glandular tissue about the urethra. A group of short glands
that are closest to the urethra and discharge mucus into its channel are subject to simple
enlargement. Outside these is a ring of submucosal glands (glands from which the
mucosal glands develop), and farther out is a large outer zone of long branched glands,
composing the bulk of the glandular tissue. Prostate cancer is almost exclusively
confined to the outer zone. The glands of the outer zone are lined by tall columnar cells
that secrete prostatic fluid under the influence of androgens from the testis. The fluid is
thin, milky, and slightly acidic.
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Male Reproductive Organs


The seminal vesicles are two structures, about 5 cm (2 inches) in length, lying
between the rectum and the base of the bladder. Their secretions form the bulk of
semen. Essentially, each vesicle consists of a much-coiled tube with numerous
diverticula or outpouches that extend from the main tube, the whole being held together
by connective tissue. At its lower end the tube is constricted to form a straight duct or
tube that joins with the corresponding ductus deferens to form the ejaculatory duct. The
vesicles are close together in their lower parts, but they are separated above where they
lie close to the deferent ducts. The seminal vesicles have longitudinal and circular layers
of smooth muscle, and their cavities are lined with mucous membrane, which is the
source of the secretions of the organs. These secretions are ejected by muscular
contractions during ejaculation. The activity of the vesicles is dependent on the
production of the hormone androgen by the testes. The secretion is thick, sticky, and
yellowish; it contains the sugar fructose and is slightly alkaline.

The bulbourethral glands, often called Cowper glands, are pea-shaped glands that
are located beneath the prostate gland at the beginning of the internal portion of
the penis. The glands, which measure only about 1 cm (0.4 inch) in diameter, have
slender ducts that run forward and toward the centre to open on the floor of the spongy
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portion of the urethra. They are composed of a network of small tubes, or tubules, and
saclike structures; between the tubules are fibres of muscle and elastic tissue that give
the glands muscular support. Cells within the tubules and sacs contain droplets of
mucus, a thick protein compound. The fluid excreted by these glands is clear and thick
and acts as a lubricant; it is also thought to function as a flushing agent that washes out
the urethra before the semen is ejaculated; it may also help to make the semen less
watery and to provide a suitable living environment for the sperm.
Ejaculatory Ducts
The two ejaculatory ducts lie on each side of the midline and are formed by the
union of the duct of the seminal vesicle, which contributes secretions to the semen, with
the end of the ductus deferens at the base of the prostate. Each duct is about 2 cm
(about 0.8 inch) long and passes between a lateral and the median lobe of the prostate
to reach the floor of the prostatic urethra. This part of the urethra has on its floor (or
posterior wall) a longitudinal ridge called the urethral crest. On each side is a
depression, the prostatic sinus, into which open the prostatic ducts. In the middle of the
urethral crest is a small elevation, the colliculus seminalis, on which the opening of the
prostatic utricle is found. The prostatic utricle is a short diverticulum or pouch lined by
mucous membrane; it may correspond to the vagina or uterus in the female. The small
openings of the ejaculatory ducts lie on each side of or just within the opening of the
prostatic utricle. The ejaculatory ducts are thin-walled and lined by columnar cells.

The female reproductive system


The female gonads, or sexual glands, are the ovaries; they are the source
of ova (eggs) and of the female sex hormones estrogens and progestogens. The fallopian,
or uterine, tubes conduct ova to the uterus, which lies within the lesser or true pelvis.
The uterus connects through the cervical canal with the vagina. The vagina opens into
the vestibule about which lie the external genitalia, collectively known as the vulva.
External genitalia
The female external genitalia include the structures placed about the entrance to
the vagina and external to the hymen, the membrane across the entrance to the vagina.
They are the mons pubis (also called the mons veneris), the labia majora and minora,
the clitoris, the vestibule of the vagina, the bulb of the vestibule, and the greater
vestibular glands.
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Female External Genitalia


The mons pubis is the rounded eminence, made by fatty tissue beneath the skin,
lying in front of the pubic symphysis. A few fine hairs may be present in childhood;
later, at puberty, they become coarser and more numerous. The upper limit of the hairy
region is horizontal across the lower abdomen.

The labia majora are two marked folds of skin that extend from the mons pubis
downward and backward to merge with the skin of the perineum. They form the lateral
boundaries of the vulval or pudendal cleft, which receives the openings of the vagina and
the urethra. The outer surface of each labium is pigmented and hairy; the inner surface
is smooth but possesses sebaceous glands. The labia majora contain fat and
loose connective tissue and sweat glands. They correspond to the scrotum in the male
and contain tissue resembling the dartos muscle. The round ligament (see below The
uterus) ends in the tissue of the labium. The labia minora are two small folds of skin,
lacking fatty tissue, that extend backward on each side of the opening into the vagina.
They lie inside the labia majora and are some 4 cm (about 1.5 inches) in length. In front,
an upper portion of each labium minus passes over the clitoris—the structure in the
female corresponding to the penis (excluding the urethra) in the male—to form a fold,
the prepuce of the clitoris, and a lower portion passes beneath the clitoris to form its
frenulum. The two labia minora are joined at the back across the midline by a fold that
19
becomes stretched at childbirth. The labia minora lack hairs but possess sebaceous and
sweat glands.

The clitoris is a small erectile structure composed of two corpora cavernosa


separated by a partition. Partially concealed beneath the forward ends of the labia
minora, it possesses a sensitive tip of spongy erectile tissue, the glans clitoridis. The
external opening of the urethra is some 2.5 cm (about 1 inch) behind the clitoris and
immediately in front of the vaginal opening.

The vestibule of the vagina is the cleft between the labia minora into which the
urethra and vagina open. The hymen vaginae lies at the opening of the vagina: it is a
thin fold of mucous membrane that varies in shape. After rupture of the hymen, the
small rounded elevations that remain are known as the carunculae hymenales. The bulb
of the vestibule, corresponding to the bulb of the penis, is two elongated masses of
erectile tissue that lie one on each side of the vaginal opening. At their posterior ends lie
the greater vestibular glands, small mucous glands that open by a duct in the groove
between the hymen and each labium minus. They correspond to the bulbourethral
glands of the male.

The blood supply and nerve supply of the female external genital organs are
similar to those supplying corresponding structures in the male.

Internal structures
The vagina
The vagina (the word means “sheath”) is the canal that extends from
the cervix (outer end) of the uterus within the lesser pelvis down to the vestibule
between the labia minora. The orifice of the vagina is guarded by the hymen. The vagina
lies behind the bladder and urethra and in front of the rectum and anal canal. Its walls
are collapsed; the anterior wall is some 7.5 cm (3 inches) in length, whereas the
posterior wall is about 1.5 cm (0.6 inch) longer. The vagina is directed obliquely upward
and backward. The axis of the vagina forms an angle of over 90° with that of the uterus.
This angle varies considerably depending on conditions in the bladder, in the rectum,
and during pregnancy. The cervix of the uterus projects for a short distance into the
vagina and is normally pressed against its posterior wall. There are, therefore, recesses
in the vagina at the back, on each side, and at the front of the cervix. These are known as
the posterior fornix (behind the cervix and the largest), the lateral fornices (at the sides),
and the anterior fornix (at the front of the cervix). The position of the uterus in relation
to the vagina is described further in the section on the uterus.
20
The upper part of the posterior wall of the vagina is covered by peritoneum or
membrane that is folded back onto the rectum to form the recto-uterine pouch. The
lower part of the posterior vaginal wall is separated from the anal canal by a mass of
tissue known as the perineal body.

The vagina has a mucous membrane and an outer smooth muscle coat closely
attached to it. The mucous membrane has a longitudinal ridge in the midline of both the
anterior and posterior walls. The ridges are known as the columns of the vagina; many
rugae, or folds, extend from them to each side. The furrows between the rugae are more
marked on the posterior wall and become especially pronounced before the birth of a
child. The membrane undergoes little change during the menstrual cycle (except in its
content of glycogen, a complex starchlike carbohydrate); this is in contradistinction to
the situation in many mammals in which marked exfoliation (shedding of the surface
cells) can occur. No glands are present in the vaginal lining, and mucus present has been
secreted by the glands in the cervical canal of the uterus. The smooth muscle coat
consists of an outer longitudinal layer and a less developed inner circular layer. The
lower part of the vagina is surrounded by the bulbospongiosus muscle, a striped
muscle attached to the perineal body.

The blood supply to the vagina is derived from several adjacent vessels, there
being a vaginal artery from the internal iliac artery and also vaginal branches from the
uterine, middle rectal, and internal pudendal arteries, all branches of the internal iliac
artery. The nerve supply to the lower part of the vagina is from the pudendal nerve and
from the inferior hypogastric and uterovaginal plexuses.

The uterus
Uterine Structure
The uterus, or womb, is shaped like an inverted pear. It is a hollow,
muscular organ with thick walls, and it has a glandular lining called the endometrium.
In an adult the uterus is 7.5 cm (3 inches) long, 5 cm (2 inches) in width, and 2.5 cm (1
inch) thick, but it enlarges to four to five times this size in pregnancy. The narrower,
lower end is called the cervix; this projects into the vagina. The cervix is made of
fibrous connective tissue and is of a firmer consistency than the body of the uterus. The
two fallopian tubes enter the uterus at opposite sides, near its top. The part of the uterus
above the entrances of the tubes is called the fundus; the part below is termed the body.
The body narrows toward the cervix, and a slight external constriction marks the
juncture between the body and the cervix.

The uterus does not lie in line with the vagina but is usually turned forward
(anteverted) to form approximately a right angle with it. The position of the uterus is
21
affected by the amount of distension in the urinary bladder and in the rectum.
Enlargement of the uterus in pregnancy causes it to rise up into the abdominal cavity, so
that there is closer alignment with the vagina. The nonpregnant uterus also curves
gently forward; it is said to be anteflexed. The uterus is supported and held in position
by the other pelvic organs, by the muscular floor or diaphragm of the pelvis, by certain
fibrous ligaments, and by folds of peritoneum. Among the supporting ligaments are two
double-layered broad ligaments, each of which contains a fallopian tube along its upper
free border and a round ligament, corresponding to the gubernaculum testis of the male,
between its layers. Two ligaments—the cardinal (Mackenrodt) ligaments—at each side of
the cervix are also important in maintaining the position of the uterus.

The cavity of the uterus is remarkably small in comparison with the size of the
organ. Except during pregnancy, the cavity is flattened, with front and rear walls
touching, and is triangular. The triangle is inverted, with its base at the top, between the
openings of the two fallopian tubes, and with its apex at the isthmus of the uterus, the
opening into the cervix. The canal of the cervix is flattened from front to back and is
somewhat larger in its middle part. It is traversed by two longitudinal ridges and has
oblique folds stretching from each ridge in an arrangement like the branches of a tree.
The cervical canal is 2.5 cm (about 1 inch) in length; its opening into the vagina is called
the external os of the uterus. The external os is small, almost circular, and often
depressed. After childbirth, the external os becomes bounded by lips in front and in
back and is thus more slitlike. The cervical canal is lined by a mucous
membrane containing numerous glands that secrete a clear, alkaline mucus. The upper
part of this lining undergoes cyclical changes resembling, but not as marked as, those
occurring in the body of the uterus. Numerous small cysts (nabothian cysts) are found in
the cervical mucous membrane. It is from this region that cervical smears are taken in
order to detect early changes indicative of cancer.

The uterus is composed of three layers of tissue. On the outside is a serous coat
of peritoneum (a membrane exuding a fluid like blood minus its cells and the clotting
factor fibrinogen), which partially covers the organ. In front it covers only the body of
the cervix; behind it covers the body and the part of the cervix that is above the vagina
and is prolonged onto the posterior vaginal wall; from there it is folded back to the
rectum. At the side the peritoneal layers stretch from the margin of the uterus to each
side wall of the pelvis, forming the two broad ligaments of the uterus.

The middle layer of tissue (myometrium) is muscular and comprises the greater
part of the bulk of the organ. It is very firm and consists of densely packed,
unstriped, smooth muscle fibres. Blood vessels, lymph vessels, and nerves are also
present. The muscle is more or less arranged in three layers of fibres running in
different directions. The outermost fibres are arranged longitudinally. Those of the
middle layer run in all directions without any orderly arrangement; this layer is the
thickest. The innermost fibres are longitudinal and circular in their arrangement.
22
The innermost layer of tissue in the uterus is the mucous membrane,
or endometrium. It lines the uterine cavity as far as the isthmus of the uterus, where it
becomes continuous with the lining of the cervical canal. The endometrium contains
numerous uterine glands that open into the uterine cavity and are embedded in the
cellular framework or stroma of the endometrium. Numerous blood vessels and
lymphatic spaces are also present. The appearances of the endometrium vary
considerably at the different stages in reproductive life. It begins to reach full
development at puberty and thereafter exhibits dramatic changes during each menstrual
cycle. It undergoes further changes before, during, and after pregnancy, during
the menopause, and in old age. These changes are for the most part hormonally induced
and controlled by the activity of the ovaries.

The endometrium in the menstrual cycle


To understand the nature of the changes in the endometrium during each
menstrual cycle it is usual to consider the endometrium to be composed of three layers.
They blend imperceptibly but are functionally distinct: the inner two layers are shed
at menstruation, and the outer or basal layer remains in position against the innermost
layer of the myometrium. The three layers are called, respectively, the stratum
compactum, the stratum spongiosum, and the stratum basale epidermidis. The stratum
compactum is nearest to the uterine cavity and contains the lining cells and the necks of
the uterine glands; its stroma is relatively dense. Superficial blood vessels lie beneath
the lining cells. The stratum spongiosum is the large middle layer. It contains the main
portions of uterine glands and accompanying blood vessels; the stromal cells are more
loosely arranged and larger than in the stratum compactum. The stratum basale
epidermidis lies against the uterine muscle; it contains blood vessels and the bases of
the uterine glands. Its stroma remains relatively unaltered during the menstrual cycle.
23
Menstrual Cycle

The menstrual cycle extends over a period of about 28 days (normal range 21–34
days), from the first day of one menstrual flow to the first day of the next. It reflects the
cycle of changes occurring in the ovary, which is itself under the control of the anterior
lobe of the pituitary gland. The menstrual cycle is divided into four phases: menstrual,
postmenstrual, proliferative, and secretory.

The secretory phase reaches its climax about a week after ovulation. Ovulation
occurs in midcycle, about 14 days before the onset of the next menstrual flow. The
endometrium has been prepared and has been stimulated to a state of active secretion
for the reception of a fertilized ovum. The stage has been set for the attachment of
the blastocyst, derived from a fertilized ovum, to the endometrium and for its
subsequent embedding. This process is called implantation; its success depends on the
satisfactory preparation of the endometrium in both the proliferative and secretory
phases. When implantation occurs, a hormone from certain cells of the blastocyst causes
prolongation of the corpus luteum and its continued activity. This causes suppression of
menstruation and results in the maintenance of the endometrium and its further
stimulation by progesterone, with consequent increased thickening. The endometrium
of early pregnancy is known as the decidua.

In a cycle in which fertilization of the ovum has not taken place, the secretory phase
terminates in menstruation.

The endometrium needs to be in a certain state of preparedness before implantation can


occur. When this stage has been passed, menstruation occurs. Repair then reestablishes
an endometrium capable of being stimulated again to the critical stage when
implantation can occur.
Blood supply and innervation
The uterus is supplied with blood by the two uterine arteries, which are branches
of the internal iliac arteries, and by ovarian arteries, which connect with the ends of the
uterine arteries and send branches to supply the uterus. The nerves to the uterus include
the sympathetic nerve fibres, which produce contraction of uterine muscle and
constriction of vessels, and parasympathetic (sacral) fibres, which inhibit muscle activity
and cause dilation of blood vessels.
The fallopian tubes
The fallopian, or uterine, tubes carry ova from the ovaries to the cavity of the
uterus. Each opens into the abdominal cavity near an ovary at one end and into the
uterus at the other. Three sections of the tubes are distinguished: the funnel-shaped
outer end, or infundibulum; the expanded and thin-walled intermediate portion, or
ampulla; and the cordlike portion, the isthmus, that opens into the uterus. The
24
infundibulum is fringed with irregular projections called fimbriae. One fimbria,
somewhat larger than the others, is usually attached to the ovary. The opening into the
abdomen is at the bottom of the infundibulum and is small. Fertilization of the ovum
usually occurs in the ampulla of the tube. Normally the fertilized egg is transported to
the uterus, but occasionally it may adhere to the tube and start developing as an ectopic
pregnancy, or tubal pregnancy. The tube is unable to support this pregnancy, and the
conceptus may be extruded through the abdominal opening or may cause rupture of the
tube, with ensuing hemorrhage.

Initiation of Pregnancy; fertilization and implantation


Major structures and hormones involved in the initiation of pregnancy. Also seen,
at right, is the development of an egg cell (ovum) from follicle to embryo.
Encyclopædia Britannica.

The fallopian tube is covered by peritoneum except on its border next to the
broad ligament. There are inner circular and outer longitudinal layers of smooth muscle
fibres continuous with those of the uterus. The inner lining has numerous longitudinal
folds that are covered with ciliated columnar and secretory cells. Muscular contraction,
movement of the hairlike cilia, and the passage of the watery secretions all probably
assist in the transport of sperm to the ampulla and of a fertilized ovum toward the
uterus.
25
The ovaries
Ovarian Structure
The female gonads, or primary sex organs, corresponding to the testes in a male,
are the two ovaries. Each is suspended by a mesentery, or fold of membrane, from the
back layer of the broad ligament of the uterus. In a woman who has not been pregnant,
the almond-shaped ovary lies in a vertical position against a depression, the ovarian
fossa, on the side wall of the lesser pelvis. This relationship is altered during and after
pregnancy. Each ovary is somewhat over 2.5 cm (1 inch) in length, 1.25 cm (0.5 inch)
across, and slightly less in thickness, but the size varies much with age and with state of
activity.

The mesentery of the ovary helps to keep it in position, and within this
membrane lie the ovarian artery and vein, lymphatic vessels, and nerve fibres.
The fallopian tube arches over the ovary and curves downward on its inner or medial
surface.

Except at its hilum, the point where blood vessels and the nerve enter the ovary
and where the mesentery is attached, the surface of the ovary is smooth and is covered
by cubical cells. Beneath the surface, the substance of the ovary is divided into an outer
portion, the cortex, and an inner portion, or medulla. The outermost part of the cortex,
immediately beneath the outer covering, forms a thin connective tissue zone, the tunica
albuginea. The rest of the cortex consists of stromal or framework cells, contained in a
fine network of fibres, and also the follicles and corpora lutea.

The ovarian follicles, sometimes called graafian follicles, are rounded enclosures
for the developing ova in the cortex near the surface of the ovary. At birth and in
childhood they are present as numerous primary or undeveloped ovarian follicles. Each
contains a primitive ovum, or oocyte, and each is covered by a single layer of flattened
cells. As many as 700,000 primary follicles are contained in the two ovaries of a young
female. Most of these degenerate before or after puberty.
Ovulation
During the onset of puberty and thereafter until menopause (except during
pregnancy), there is a cyclic development of one or more follicles each month into a
mature follicle. The covering layer of the primary follicle thickens and can
be differentiated into an inner membrana granulosa and an outer vascularized theca
interna. The cells of these layers (mostly the theca interna) produce estrogenic steroid
hormones that exert their effects on the endometrium of the uterus and on other tissues.
The maintenance and growth of the follicle to maturity is brought about by a
26
follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) from the anterior lobe of the pituitary gland.
Another hormone, called luteinizing hormone (LH), from the anterior lobe, assists FSH
to cause the maturing, now fluid-filled follicle to secrete estrogens. LH also causes a ripe
follicle (1.0–1.5 cm [0.4–0.6 inch] in diameter) to rupture, causing the liberation of the
oocyte into the peritoneal cavity and thence into the fallopian tube. This liberation of the
oocyte is called ovulation; it occurs at about the midpoint of the reproductive cycle, on
the 13th or 14th day of a 28-day cycle as measured from the first day of the menstrual
flow.

Ovulation
The steps of ovulation, beginning with a dormant primordial follicle that grows and
matures and is eventually released from the ovary into the fallopian tube.

After ovulation the ruptured follicle collapses because of loss of its follicular fluid
and rapidly becomes transformed into a soft, well-vascularized glandular structure
known as the corpus luteum(“yellow body”). The corpus luteum develops rapidly,
becomes vascularized after about four days, and is fully established by nine days. The
gland produces the steroid hormone progesterone and some estrogens. Its activity is
both stimulated and maintained by luteinizing hormone. Progesterone stimulates
glandular proliferation and secretion in an endometrium primed by estrogens.
27
While the ovarian follicle matures, the primary oocyte divides into a secondary
oocyte and a small rudimentary ovum called the first polar body. This occurs at about
the time when the follicle develops its cavity; the oocyte also gains a translucent
acellular covering, or envelope, the zona pellucida. The secondary oocyte is liberated at
ovulation; it is 120–140 micrometres in diameter and is surrounded by the zona
pellucida and a few layers of cells known as the corona radiata. The final maturation of
the oocyte, with the formation of the rudimentary ovum called the second polar body,
occurs at the time of fertilization.

Track the development of a human embryo into a baby from


fertilization to childbirth
If fertilization does not occur, then the life of the corpus luteum is limited to
about 14 days. Degeneration of the gland starts toward the end of this period,
and menstruation occurs. The corpus luteum shrinks, fibrous tissue is formed, and it is
converted into a scarlike structure called a corpus albicans, which persists for a few
months.

28
Should fertilization occur and be followed by implantation of the blastocyst,
hormones (particularly human chorionic gonadotropin) are produced by cells of the
blastocyst to prolong the life of the corpus luteum. It persists in an active state for at
least the first two months of pregnancy, until the placental tissue has taken over its
hormone-producing function. The corpus luteum of pregnancy then also retrogresses,
becoming a fibrous scar by the time of parturition.

Blood supply and innervation


The ovarian arteries arise from the front of the aorta in a manner similar to the
testicular arteries, but at the brim of the lesser pelvis they turn down into the pelvic
cavity. Passing in the suspensory ligament of the ovary, each artery reaches the broad
ligament below the fallopian tube and then passes into the mesovarium to divide into
branches distributed to the ovary. One branch continues in the broad ligament to
anastomose with the uterine artery. The ovarian veins emerge from each ovary as a
network that eventually becomes a single vein; the terminations are similar to those of
the testicular veins. The nerves are derived from the ovarian nerve network on the
ovarian artery.

*********

29
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would like to communicate my deep earnest
gratitude and thanks to my respected subject teacher
Mr. Susovan Ghosh for his valuable guidance and without
who’s helping hand the project would not have been a
success.

The subject of the project HUMAN


REPRODUCTION and by doing this project I have learnt
more about it. I am really pleased to him. I am also
grateful to my parents & my well-wisher, who helped to
complete this project. I hope everyone would like it.

Thank You,

Abroy Majumder
Class- XII, Science
Roll No.02
Reg. No.2020-2021/1615

30
CERTIFICATE

THIS IS TO CERTIFY THAT MR. ABROY


MAJUMDER, A STUDENT OF CLASS-XII(SCIENCE),
WITH ROLL NO.02, REG. NO.2020-21/1615 OF
SWAMI DHANANJOY DAS KATHIA BABA MISSION
SCHOOL HAS SUCCESSFULLY COMPLETED THE
BIOLOGY PROJECT WORK ENTITLED ‘HUMAN
REPRODUCTION.

THIS PROJECT IS ABSOLUTELY GENUINE


AND DOES NOT INDULGE IN PLAGIARISM OF ANY
KIND. THE REFERENCES TAKEN IN THIS
PROJECT HAVE BEEN DECLARED AT THE END.

SIGNATURE OF GUIDE SIGNATURE OF EXAMINER

SIGNATURE OF PRINCIPAL
31

CONCLUTION

By all the details on the topic of ‘”HUMAN


REPRODUCTION” we come to know about the
reproduction system of human body many more.

So, I am very grateful to my Biological science teacher


for giving me this project and very thankful to you for your
guidance.

32
Bibliography

During framing this project, besides my teachers and


parents’ other things that guided me a lot are :-

Reference:-

1. NCERT Biology – Class-XII


2. Truman’s’ Biology- Class-XII
3. Internet.
I N D E X
Sl. Topic Page No.
No.
01. Introduction 1-3
02. Human reproductive 4-7
system

03. Development of the 7-9


reproductive organs

04. The male 9-17


reproductive system

05. The female 17-22


reproductive system

06. The endometrium in 22-24


the menstrual cycle

Ovarian Structure 25-27

07. The development of a 27-28


human embryo into a
baby from
fertilization to
childbirth
08. Acknowledgement 29
09. certificate 30
10. Conclusion 31
11. Bibliography 32

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