eggovum; the mature female sex
cell of an
animal or
plantSource: Noland, George B. 1983. General
Biology, 11th Edition. St. Louis, MO. C. V. Mosby ...
Full article >>>5 kg ostrich
egg contains the largest existing single
cell currently known, though the extinct Aepyornis and some dinosaurs had larger eggs. The bee hummingbird produces the smallest known bird
egg, which weighs half of a gram.
Full article >>>egg -- (1) A large
gamete without flagellae that is fertilized by a
sperm cell. An
egg cell is also called an
ovum. (2) A complex multicellular structure in which an
animal embryo develops.
Full article >>>egg: the
haploid cell within the female
ovary.
elements: the fundamental building blocks of matter within all living things.
embryo: forms when all the
organs of the body have taken shape.
Full article >>>Egg formation takes place in the ovaries.
In contrast to males, the initial steps in
egg production occur prior to birth.
Diploid stem cells called
oogonia divide by
mitosis to produce more
oogonia and
primary oocytes.
Full article >>>eggA female
gamete, which usually contains abundant
cytoplasm and
yolk; nonmotile and often larger than a male
gamete.
ejaculatory duct ...
Full article >>>egg The middle of three
haploid cells at the micropylar end of the
embryo sac; when fertilized, it will form the
zygote.
egg apparatus
Egg cell and adjacent
synergids in the
embryo sac (female
gametophyte) of
angiosperms.
Full article >>>mictic eggA thin
shelled
haploid egg. If not fertilized, they will produce males by
parthenogenesis. If fertilized, they will accumulate a large amount of
yolk and secrete a heavier, resistant
shell.
Full article >>>Chicken
egg white cystatin was first described in the late 1960s. Since then, our knowledge about a super
family of similar
proteins present in
mammals, birds, fish, insects,
plants and some
protozoa has expanded, ...
Full article >>>amniote
egg An
egg with compartmentalized sacs (a liquid-filled sac in which the
embryo develops, a food sac, and a waste sac) that allowed
vertebrates to reproduce on land.
Full article >>>As that
egg develops into a
fetus and grows into an
animal, we know that the
animal being born will be
transgenic, ...
Full article >>>storage (
egg whites of birds, reptiles; seeds)
transport (
hemoglobin)
contractile (
muscle) ...
Full article >>>merogones -
egg fragments (in sea urchins) that can divide and develop, even if they have only a
haploid nucleus.
mesen
chyme -
mesodermal
cells in a developing
embryo with the ability to move freely and individually.
Full article >>>[Gr. oon - an
egg; Gr. kytos - a hollow vessel, modern usage: cyt- denotes a
cell]. A female germ
cell that must undergo two meiotic
divisions to become a
mature ovum.
Full article >>>If a mother's
egg splits before
fertilization, and then both go on to be fertilized, it can result in semi-identical twins, who would be identical on their mother's side but fraternal on the father's side.
Complications of twin pregnancy ...
Full article >>>Ovipositor: The
egg-laying apparatus of a female insect.
Palp (palpus): Sensory
organ attached to insect
mouthparts that is used to test the quality of food.
Full article >>>ovulum -
egg]. Mature female
gamete or
egg cell.
P
pachytene [Gr. pachytes - thickness; Gr. tainia - ribbon]. The third stage in
prophase 1 of
meiosis in which there is further shortening and thickening of the
bivalents.
Full article >>>Human: A fertilized
egg that has begun
cell division, often called a pre-
embryo (for pre-implantation
embryo). An
embryo is now defined as a later stage, i.e. at the completion of" the pre-
embryonic stage, which is considered to end at about day 14.
Full article >>>When a
sperm and an
egg join together, they combine their half sets to make a unique, new set of 46
chromosomes.
Full article >>>A
haploid sex
cell,
egg or
sperm, that contains a single copy of each
chromosome. GEM. A genetically engineered microorganism.
Gene. A
locus on a
chromosome that encodes a specific
protein or several related
proteins.
Full article >>>Germ
cell -- a sex
cell or
gamete (
egg or
spermatozoan).Haldane equation Haldane's law: the generalization that if first generation
hybrids are produced between two
species, but one sex is absent, rare, or sterile, that sex is the heterogamic sex.
Full article >>>gametes Reproductive
cells (
sperm or
egg) which are
haploid. gangliosides Sphingo
lipids containing complex oligosaccharides as head groups.
Full article >>>At about the same time, it was also discovered that during the formation of
egg and
sperm cells, a
cell division occurs without prior doubling of the number of
chromosomes.
Full article >>>In an incompatible cross, the
egg and
sperm nuclei fail to unite during
fertilization. The
egg dies during
embryogenesis. In some of these
strains, Yen and Barr (1971) found substantial numbers of Rickettsia-like
microbes in adults, eggs and
embryos.
Full article >>>The notion that "all life [is] from [an]
egg" (from the Latin "Omne vivum ex ovo") is a foundational concept of modern
biology, it means that there has been an unbroken continuity of life from the initial
origin of life to the present time.
Full article >>>Drosophila melanogaster
egg"The female fruit fly lays batches of between 15 and 20 white eggs each day.
Full article >>>The
nucleus of a
sperm or an
egg prior to
fertilization.
Sperm and
egg cells carry half the number of
chromosomes of other nonreproductive
cells.
Full article >>>STREPTAVIDIN - A
bacterial analog of
egg white
avidin.
STRINGENCY - The conditions employed for
hybridization which determine the specificity of the
annealing re
action between two single-
stranded
nucleic acid molecules.
Full article >>>Streptavidin: A
bacterial analog of
egg white
avidin.
Stringency: A term used to describe the conditions of
hybridization.
Full article >>>A single set of
chromosomes (half the full set of
genetic material), present in the
egg and
sperm cells of
animals and in the
egg and pollen
cells of
plants (Gk. haploos, single).
Human beings have 23
chromosomes in their reproductive
cells.
Full article >>> Lecithin a
phospholipid found in
egg yolk (used as an emulsifying agent)
(lecithos =
egg yolk)
AntonvanLeeuwenhoek person who lived in the 1600s and was the first person to see
sperm cells in which he thought he could see a
homunculus ...
Full article >>>Haploid: A single set of
chromosomes (half the full set of
genetic material), present in the
egg and
sperm cells o f
animals and in the
egg and pollen
cells of
plants.
Human beings have 23
chromosomes in their
sex cells. Compare to
diploid.
Full article >>>chorion. The outer membrane of an insect
egg.
circulative
virus. A
virus that systemically infects its insect
vector and usually is
transmitted for the remainder of the
vector's life; persistent
virus.
Full article >>>Definition: The development of an unfertilized
egg into an individual. This type of
reproduction occurs most commonly in wasps, bees, ants, and some arthropods.
Full article >>>Illustrate outcome of
meiosis (
egg and
sperm.)
Understand relationship
between
chromosomes, ...
Full article >>>Lecithotrophic
larva. A planktonic-dispersing
larva that lives off
yolk supplied via the
eggLeeward. The side of an island opposite from the one facing a persistent wind ...
Full article >>>:
Sexual reproduction in which one sex produces
sex cells much larger (
egg) than those of the other (
sperm).
Antagonistic
pleiotropy ...
Full article >>>'"/>