Semen vs. Sperm
What is the difference between Sperm and Semen?
Sperm
Sperm is the male reproductive cell or gamete, a microscopic cell with a head and tail that looks like a tadpole.
This determined little cell is hyper-focused on one job and one job only. It wants to find an egg and make a baby. This single-cell organism can accomplish its mission through sex or in vitro fertilization.
In one little sperm, there is a total of 23 chromosomes—half of what you need to make a human. The egg contains the other 23. Together, they complete each other.
Though sperm has a long whip-like tail, it is not strong enough to travel on this long journey to the egg, they need a ride.
Semen
Luckily, sperm doesn't have to travel alone. Thanks to semen, sperm is carried away.
Semen, or seminal fluid, is an organic fluid created to contain and transport sperm, or spermatozoa, from the male reproductive tract into the female reproductive tract. Semen contains all the chemicals that a sperm cell could need. The seminal vesicles in the pelvis and the prostate provide these chemicals.
Like chips for a long road trip, semen needs to have fructose to give sperm the energy it needs. It also needs prostaglandins.
Prostaglandins have two main jobs. One is to help sperm swim to the egg or ovum through the female reproductive tract. The second is to induct sperm mobility.
When there is an imbalance in prostaglandins, this can result in male infertility or affect sperm motility.
Egg and Sperm
Upon ejaculation, the mixture of fluids rocket into the female reproductive tract.
The average ejaculation is around a single teaspoon of fluid. This small amount can carry an incredible sperm count: anywhere from 15 - 200 MILLION sperm.
When the egg and sperm meet it creates a zygote. This fertilized egg can then implant in the uterus resulting in a pregnancy. Only one egg is released per month in a menstrual cycle.
With a male reproductive system, one person can theoretically impregnate nine people, with a female reproductive system, per day! Therefore, in theory, in the time it takes the female reproductive system to turn out one baby, the male reproductive system can cause 2,430 pregnancies.
For centuries the responsibility of family planning and contraceptive use has leaned heavily on those with a female reproductive system. Half of all pregnancies are unplanned. Therefore, the need for contraceptive support to be available to all genders is vital in our path towards gender equality.
Sperm-targeting Contraception
MCI is on a mission to create a world where everyone has reproductive freedom. Through efforts in advocacy, education, and funding research efforts to lead to a sperm targeting birth control, we want to make family planning an equal playing field. We believe that everyone deserves reproductive autonomy.
This guides us as we evaluate opportunities for funding and advocacy support to develop new methods of male contraception or a non-hormonal, reversible male birth control (NHRMC). We would essentially be funding the creation of the male birth control pill.
We encourage you to join us on our journey and share your thoughts with us. To help us deliver the best content and advocacy possible, we'd like to know what "Reproductive Autonomy for All" means to you.
Sperm
Sperm is the male reproductive cell or gamete, a microscopic cell with a head and tail that looks like a tadpole.
This determined little cell is hyper-focused on one job and one job only. It wants to find an egg and make a baby. This single-cell organism can accomplish its mission through sex or in vitro fertilization.
In one little sperm, there is a total of 23 chromosomes—half of what you need to make a human. The egg contains the other 23. Together, they complete each other.
Though sperm has a long whip-like tail, it is not strong enough to travel on this long journey to the egg, they need a ride.
Semen
Luckily, sperm doesn't have to travel alone. Thanks to semen, sperm is carried away.
Semen, or seminal fluid, is an organic fluid created to contain and transport sperm, or spermatozoa, from the male reproductive tract into the female reproductive tract. Semen contains all the chemicals that a sperm cell could need. The seminal vesicles in the pelvis and the prostate provide these chemicals.
Like chips for a long road trip, semen needs to have fructose to give sperm the energy it needs. It also needs prostaglandins.
Prostaglandins have two main jobs. One is to help sperm swim to the egg or ovum through the female reproductive tract. The second is to induct sperm mobility.
When there is an imbalance in prostaglandins, this can result in male infertility or affect sperm motility.
Egg and Sperm
Upon ejaculation, the mixture of fluids rocket into the female reproductive tract.
The average ejaculation is around a single teaspoon of fluid. This small amount can carry an incredible sperm count: anywhere from 15 - 200 MILLION sperm.
When the egg and sperm meet it creates a zygote. This fertilized egg can then implant in the uterus resulting in a pregnancy. Only one egg is released per month in a menstrual cycle.
With a male reproductive system, one person can theoretically impregnate nine people, with a female reproductive system, per day! Therefore, in theory, in the time it takes the female reproductive system to turn out one baby, the male reproductive system can cause 2,430 pregnancies.
For centuries the responsibility of family planning and contraceptive use has leaned heavily on those with a female reproductive system. Half of all pregnancies are unplanned. Therefore, the need for contraceptive support to be available to all genders is vital in our path towards gender equality.
Sperm-targeting Contraception
MCI is on a mission to create a world where everyone has reproductive freedom. Through efforts in advocacy, education, and funding research efforts to lead to a sperm targeting birth control, we want to make family planning an equal playing field. We believe that everyone deserves reproductive autonomy.
This guides us as we evaluate opportunities for funding and advocacy support to develop new methods of male contraception or a non-hormonal, reversible male birth control (NHRMC). We would essentially be funding the creation of the male birth control pill.
We encourage you to join us on our journey and share your thoughts with us. To help us deliver the best content and advocacy possible, we'd like to know what "Reproductive Autonomy for All" means to you.
Nuts & Bolts: Semen vs. Sperm
To learn more, please visit our series of posts about male reproduction and contraception:
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