External Fertilization


Most land animals use some form of internal fertilization similar to that which we have described for humans. External fertilization, on the other hand, is more common among aquatic animals, who simply dump their sperm and eggs into the water and let currents mix the two male and female cells together. The sea urchin is a typical example: a male sea urchin releases several billion sperm into the water, and these sperm then swim toward eggs released in the same area. Fertilization occurs within seconds when sperm come into contact and fuse with eggs. As noted in Reproduction, external fertilization is essentially sexual reproduction without sexual intercourse. For humans the process of reproduction by external means may lack the intimacy of internal reproduction, but since 1978 a form of external fertilization has offered the opportunity of conceiving children to couples who otherwise might have remained childless.

 
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