Biology, asked by PatelTalib12, 1 year ago

What is blastocoel?

Answers

Answered by ManasBhanwar
1

A blastocoel (also spelled blastocoele and blastocele) is a fluid-filled cavity that forms in the animal hemisphere of early amphibian and echinoderm embryos, or between the epiblast and hypoblast of avian, reptilian, and mammalian blastoderm-stage embryos.

Answered by potrriselvan45
0

Answer:

A blastocoel is also termed the blastocyst cavity or cleavage or segmentation cavity is the name given to the fluid-filled cavity of the blastula (blastocyst) that results from cleavage of the ovum after fertilization.

The blastocoel probably serves two major functions in frog embryos:

(1) it permits cell migration during gastrulation.

(2) it prevents the cells beneath it from interacting prematurely with the cells above it.

The blastocoel plays an important role in development of cell as it sets the stage for future growth and change in the cells of the early embryo.

Explanation:

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