Fertilization

Fertilization
The initial event in development in sexual reproduction is fertilization, the union of male and female gametes to form a zygote. Fertilization accomplishes two things: it provides for recombination of paternal and maternal genes, thus restoring the original diploid number of chromosomes characteristic of the species, and it activates the egg to begin development. However, sperm are not always required for development. Eggs of some species can be artificially induced to initiate development without sperm fertilization (artificial parthenogenesis), but in the great majority of cases the embryo will not be able to progress very far down the developmental path before lethal developmental abnormalities arise. However, some species have natural parthenogenesis. Of these, some have eggs that develop normally in the absence of sperm. In other species (some fishes and salamanders), sperm is required for egg activation, but the sperm contributes no genetic material. Thus neither sperm contact nor the parental genome is always essential for egg activation.