Hermaphrodite



         


A hermaphrodite is a species that contains both male and female sexual organs at some point during their lives. Generally, hermaphroditism occurs in the invertebrates, although it occurs in a fair number of fishes, and to a lesser degree in other vertebrates. See below for use of the term in plants. In zoology, this term includes:

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In animals

Gonadal dysgenesis, a type of intersexuality formerly known as True Hermaphroditism, occurs in about one percent of mammals (including humans), and it is extremely rare for both sets of sexual organs to be functional. In most cases neither set is functional. In many cases, these manifestations can be "corrected," sometimes only cosmetically, shortly after birth.

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In plants

The term hermaphrodite is used in botany to describe a flower that has both staminate (male, pollen-producing) and carpelate (female, seed-producing) parts. Other terms for this condition are bisexual and perfect. Hermaphrodism in plants is more complex than in animals because plants can have hermaphroditic flowers as described, or unisexual flowers with both male and female types developing on the same individual—a closer analogy to animal hermaphrodism. However, this latter condition constitutes monoecy in plants, and is especially common to the conifers, while occuring in only about 7% of angiosperm species (Molnar, 2004).

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Etymology

The term "hermaphrodite" derives from Hermaphroditus, the son of Hermes and Aphrodite in Greek mythology, who was fused with a nymph, resulting in one being possessing physical traits of both sexes (thus Hermaphroditus was, by the modern terminology, a simultaneous hermaphrodite, but for a famous mythological sequential hermaphrodite see Tiresias).

See also: Intersexuals (formerly known as hermaphrodites)

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Reference



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