Yes, all human embryos initially develop with a common set of structures that can lead to either male or female characteristics. This early stage is often referred to as having a "bipotential" state, where the gonads are neither male nor female. Around the sixth week of gestation, the presence of the Y chromosome triggers the development of male characteristics, while the absence of this chromosome leads to female development. Thus, while all embryos start with the potential to develop as either sex, genetic factors ultimately determine their sex.
all snails have both male and female parts
the male is the one who has the babies the male sea horse is the one who has the babies at all times the female is the food saplier
yes they will because the male will probably have babies with all three
Nope. However the roles are reversed and the male carries the babies.
male carries the babies because they are stronger and can pretect the babies
Yes you have to separate the male gerbil from the female with her babies because if you leave the male with the female and her babies the male will kill them.
no because if all drone bees were male they would not have babies
Male cats cannot have babies, so they cannot have babies early.
Yes, all you will need is male rabbit
male
You can't. The female needs the male to mate with her if not she won't have babies.
I have a European Male, and when his mate has babies, She feeds them at night, and has them wean at around 3 weeks of age[She does all this i don't interfere] The male checks on them. and when they leave the nest the male and female let them lie with them.