hermaphroditism

(noun)

having sexual organs of both sexes

Related Terms

  • Fragmentation
  • d
  • Budding
  • binary fission
  • parthenogenesis

Examples of hermaphroditism in the following topics:

  • Types of Sexual and Asexual Reproduction

    • Hermaphroditism occurs in animals where one individual has both male and female reproductive parts.
    • Invertebrates, such as earthworms, slugs, tapeworms and snails, are often hermaphroditic.
    • Hermaphrodites may self-fertilize or may mate with another of their species, fertilizing each other and both producing offspring.
  • Physiological Processes in Sponges

    • Sponges are monoecious (hermaphroditic), which means that one individual can produce both gametes (eggs and sperm) simultaneously.
    • Sponges may also become sequentially hermaphroditic, producing oocytes first and spermatozoa later.
  • Phylum Annelida

    • However, cross-fertilization is preferred in hermaphroditic animals.
    • These animals may also show simultaneous hermaphroditism, participating in simultaneous sperm exchange when they are aligned for copulation.
  • Chordates and the Evolution of Vertebrates

    • Most tunicates are hermaphrodites.
  • The Life Cycle of an Angiosperm

    • Some species of angiosperms are hermaphroditic (stamens and pistils are contained on a single flower), some species are monoecious (stamens and pistils occur on separate flowers, but the same plant), and some are dioecious (staminate and pistillate flowers occur on separate plants).
  • Phylum Nemertea

    • Animals in phylum Nemertea show sexual dimorphism, although freshwater species may be hermaphroditic.
  • Sexual Reproduction in Angiosperms

    • Flowers that contain both an androecium and a gynoecium are called perfect, androgynous, or hermaphrodites.
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