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A sperm attempting to fertilize an egg
Fertilisation (BE), also spelled
fertilization (AE), which is less ambiguously
referred to as syngamy, is the process of a sperm fusing with an
ovum, which eventually leads to the development of an embryo.
The whole process of development of new individuals is called procreation.
Fertilisation in mammals
To deliver the sperm to female, the male inserts his external sexual
organ into the opening to vagina, the passage into the female's sexual organ. (This
process is a part of copulation.) Once the male ejaculates, a large number of sperm cells travel toward the ovum. For
fertilisation to occur, a single sperm cell must successfully penetrate the ovum's coat. Once this happens, the female is said to
be pregnant.
Fertilisation in plants
After the female part of the flower is pollinated, pollen grains attempt to travel into the ovary by creating a path called "pollen tube." The pollen tube does not directly reach the ovary in a straight line. It travels near the
skin of the style and curls to the bottom of the ovary, then near the receptacle, it breaks through the ovule and reaches the ovum to fertilize it. After being fertilized, the ovary starts to swell and
becomes a fruit.
With multi-seeded fruits, multiple grains of pollen are necessary for syngamy with each ovule. The process is easy to
visualize if one looks at corn silk, which is the female flower of corn. Pollen from the tassel (the male flower) falls on the
sticky external portion of the silk, then pollen tubes grow down the silk to the attached ovule. The dried silk remains inside
the husk of the ear as the seeds mature, so one can carefully remove the husk to show the floral structures. The development of
the flesh of the fruit is proportional to the percentage of fertilized ovules. For example, with watermelon, about a thousand
grains of pollen must be delivered and spread evenly on the three lobes of the stigma to make a normal sized and shaped
fruit.
See also
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