What does STD stand for?
Sexually Transmitted Disease
Joining of a sperm and egg is called . . .
Fertilization
Process of two parents producing offspring with genetic variation.
Sexual reproduction
Their function is to analyse the condition of the body.
Internal receptors
Joints that do not allow movement
Fixed
These types of STDs can be cured with antibiotics
Bacterial STDs
(Chlamydia, syphilis, gonorrhea)
What are the stages in human development.
Egg . . Fertilized egg . . Zygote . . Embryo . . . Fetus . . Infant
Reproductive hormones (males and females)
Males - testosterone
Females - estrogen, progesterone, LH
What's the term used for eyebrows, eyelids, eyelashes, ocular muscles, and lacrimal glands?
Accessory organs
Joints that allows movement
Mobile
T/F
Once someone is cured of an STD that can NOT get that STD again.
False
When does a human fetus heart start to beat?
22 days
Tubes that transport . . .
For males - transport sperm from testes to urethra
For females - transport egg from ovary to uterus
Males - Vas deferens
Females - fallopian tubes
It is located in the eye, their function is to detect light.
Photoreceptors
It is an active organ.
Muscles
Most common viral STDs
HIV, HPV, Hepatitis, and Herpes
A fetus receives nutrition through. . . .
Placenta and umbilical cord
Name (for males and females) of structures where meiosis occurs AND names of gamete produced (males and females)
Males - testes/testicals and sperm
Females - ovaries and egg/ovum
Two mechanism of the ear
Hearing mechanism and balance mechanism
An example of cartilaginous skeleton
Embryos
What is someone called who has. O symptoms but can still pass an STD
A Carrier
How long is human gestation (in weeks)?
40 weeks
Process of fertilization that occurs in a Petri dish and the created embryo is implanted into a female uterus
In vitro fertilization
A spherical structure that includes lens, retina, choroid, scleral, fovea, optic nerve, cornea, iris and pupil.
Ocular globe
It is responsible for the movement of the bones.
Striated muscle fibre