environment

definition of female

The term female is used to designate those beings that belong to the female gender and therefore have the XX chromosome pair unlike males, who have the XY. In these chromosomes lies the genetic information to determine sex, anatomy, and other gender-specific elements. In the case of the human being, the term female is not so widely used but the concept of woman or feminine is used especially, thus leaving female reserved for the rest of the animals.

The females are the most delicate and weak beings compared to the males who are usually more stocky and strong. In general, although there are exceptions to this idea, females or women show smaller and more delicate anatomical forms that also have to do with the social function that they must fulfill naturally: that of taking care of the young, while the male must be strong to get food and protect his family. However, in some animal species, such as big cats, the females are in charge of the family and are also in charge of getting food.

Females, unlike what happens with males, have internal reproductive organs, that is, they are not visible. At the same time, the female reproductive system is more complex than the male because it is also within these organisms where the embryo develops that will give birth to a new life. The females, therefore, are the only ones, of both sexes, that can become pregnant or pregnant. Depending on the animal and the particular characteristics of the species, the gestation period can clearly vary in its duration, some reaching just a few months and others almost two years. Hence the particular and unique relationship that the female establishes with her offspring.

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