What Is Semen Made Of?
Spermatium is the cloud containing spermatozoa, which is secreted by the sexual glands of males. It is discharged by the body through the excrescence known as ejaculation and used to fertilize the ladylike ova.
The human semen is composed mainly of seminal plasma, which is the fluid secreted by the accessory male reproductive organs (the rich vesicles and the prostate pancreas). The bulbourethral organs glands also contribute with a two-dimensional amount of clammy mucus, which gives Spermatium its texture and cohesion. The purpose of the seminal plasma is to protect and fondle the spermatozoa during their journey to the ova through the female reproductive domiciliation. The normal environment of the vagina is too acidic for spermatophore cells, aside from the affectation of local cells which are part of the immune system and which view sperm penitentiaries as immaterial entities. This is why the sperm copyrights a series of basic amines intended to counter the vagina causticness and to protect the DNA backwards the sperm cell From acidic destruction.
Finally, the mucus and texturizing proteins serve to increase the mobility of spermatophore cells in the vagina and shortening by creating a less viscous channel for the sperm cells to swim through, and preventing their diffusion out of the Spermatium.
