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When and where in the body is oogenesis ...

When and where in the body is oogenesis completed?

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Oogenesis. The process of formation of a mature female gamete ovum) called oogenesis. It occurs in the ovaries (female gonads). It consists of the phases: multiplication, growth and maturation.

(a) Multiplication phase. In the foetal development, certain cells in the germinal epithelium of the ovary of the foetus are larger than others. These cells divide by mitosis, producing a couple of million egg mother cells or oogonia in each ovary of the foetus. No more oogonia are formed or added after birth. The oogonia multiply by mitotic divisions forming the primary oocytes.
(b) Growth phase. This phase of the primary oocyte is very long. It may extend over many years. The oogonium grows into a large primary oocyte by taking food from the surrounding follicle cells. It happens after puberty.
(c) Maturation phase. Like a primary spermatocyte, each primary oocyte undergoes two maturation divisions, first meiotic and the second meiotic. The results of maturation divisions in oogenesis are, however, very different from those in spermatogenesis. In the first, meiotic division. the primary oocyte divides into two very unequal haploid daughter cells- a large secondary oocyte and a very small first polar body or polocyte In the second maturation division, the first polar body may divide to form two second polar bodies. The secondary oocyte again divides into unequal daughter cells, a large cod and a very small second polar body. The ootid grows into a functional haploid ovum. Thus from one oogonium, one ovum and three polar bodies are formed. The ovum, is the actual female gamete. The polar bodies take no part in reproduction and hence, soon degenerate In human beings, ovum is released from the ovary in the secondary oocyte stage. The maturation of secondary oocyte is completed in the mother's oviduct Fallopian tube usually after the sperm has entered the secondary oocyte for fertilization
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