Human Reproductive Anatomy
The reproductive tissues of male and female humans develop similarly in utero until a low level of the hormone testosterone is released from male gonads. Testosterone causes the undeveloped tissues to differentiate into male sexual organs. Primitive gonads become testes; other tissues produce a penis and scrotum in males.
Male Reproductive Anatomy
In the male reproductive system, the scrotum houses the testicles or testes, providing passage for blood vessels, nerves, and muscles related to testicular function. The testes, a pair of male reproductive organs, produce sperm and male sex hormones, including the steroid testosterone. Coiled in each testis are seminiferous tubules that produce sperm.
Sperm
Sperm are immobile at body temperature; therefore, the scrotum and penis are external to the body so that a proper temperature is maintained for motility. In land mammals, the pair of testes must be suspended outside the body at about 2° C lower than body temperature to produce viable sperm.
Sperm develop in the seminiferous tubules that are coiled inside the testes . The walls of the seminiferous tubules are composed of the developing sperm cells, with the least-developed sperm at the periphery of the tubule and the fully-developed sperm in the lumen. The sperm cells are mixed with "nursemaid" cells called Sertoli cells which protect the germ cells and promote their development. Other cells mixed in the wall of the tubules are the interstitial cells of Leydig; these cells produce high levels of testosterone once the male reaches adolescence.
Male reproductive system
The reproductive structures of the human male are shown. Sperm are produced in the seminiferous tubules, mature in the epididymis, and then are forced out into the vas deferens and out of the body through the urethra during ejaculation.
Sperm consist of a flagellum (as a tail), a neck that contains the cell's energy-producing mitochondria, and a head that contains the genetic material . When the sperm have developed flagella, or lash-like appendages that protrude from the cell body, and are nearly mature, they leave the testicles and enter the epididymis. This structure lies along the top and posterior portion of the testes; it is the site of sperm maturation. The sperm leave the epididymis and enter the vas deferens, which is the duct in the testicle that carries sperm from the epididymis to the ejaculatory duct.
Structure of a human sperm
Human sperm, visualized using scanning electron microscopy, have a flagellum, neck, and head.
Semen is a mixture of sperm and spermatic duct secretions (about 10 percent of the total), along with fluids from accessory glands, that contribute most of the semen's volume. An ejaculate will contain from two to five milliliters of fluid with from 50–120 million sperm per milliliter. The bulk of the semen comes from the accessory glands associated with the male reproductive system, including the seminal vesicles, the prostate gland, and the bulbourethral gland .
Seminal vesicles, penis, prostate, and bulbourethral gland
The seminal vesicles are a pair of glands that lie along the posterior border of the urinary bladder. The glands make a solution that is thick, yellowish, and alkaline. As sperm are only motile in an alkaline environment, a basic pH is important to reverse the acidity of the vaginal environment. The solution also contains mucus, fructose (a sperm mitochondrial nutrient), a coagulating enzyme, ascorbic acid, and local-acting hormones called prostaglandins.
The penis is an organ that drains urine from the renal bladder and functions as a copulatory organ during intercourse. The penis contains three tubes of erectile tissue running through the length of the organ. These consist of a pair of tubes on the dorsal side, called the corpus cavernosum, and a single tube of tissue on the ventral side, called the corpus spongiosum. This tissue, when engorged with blood, becomes erect and hard, in preparation for intercourse. The organ is inserted into the vagina, culminating with an ejaculation, which is the forcible ejection of semen from the urethra. An orgasm is a two-stage process: first, glands and accessory organs connected to the testes contract; second, semen (containing sperm) is expelled through the urethra during ejaculation. After intercourse, the blood drains from the erectile tissue and the penis becomes flaccid.
The walnut-shaped prostate gland surrounds the urethra, the connection to the urinary bladder. It has a series of short ducts that directly connect to the urethra. The gland is a mixture of smooth muscle and glandular tissue. The muscle provides much of the force needed for ejaculation to occur.
The bulbourethral gland, or Cowper's gland, is an exocrine gland which secretes a clear fluid known as pre-ejaculate that is generated upon sexual arousal. This gland releases its secretion prior to the release of the bulk of the semen. It neutralizes any acid residue in the urethra left over from urine. This usually accounts for a couple of drops of fluid in the total ejaculate and may contain a few sperm. Withdrawal of the penis from the vagina before ejaculation to prevent pregnancy may not work if sperm are present in the bulbourethral gland secretions.