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The answer is yes and no, depending on how you treat the question. With respect to the baby, well the male's dna will stay in the mother's body as the baby is in the mother's body for 9 months in all. The baby's genetic composition consists of half of the male's dna and half of the mother's. So with respect to the baby, the dna actually stays in the mother's body.

When you take from the point of the sperms, as soon as the ovun gets fertilized by one sperm, the other sperms are broken down. So the dna found in those sperms which did not participate in fertilization are removed from the female's body.

Hope this helps.

2007-03-23 02:10:00 · answer #1 · answered by Farhali 2 · 1 1

no way, what happens is the sperm fuses with the egg to make a gamete (2 zygotes, 1 maternal the other paternal), with half the mothers and half the farthers DNA. the baby will carry the 23 male chromosomes, along with the 23 from the female.

2007-03-23 08:55:23 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No, the remaining sperm die and are broken down, the vagina is a self-cleaning organ, so any remmants are soon removed.

Most of the male DNA leaves when the baby is born.
If any has survived that long, the next period would flush it out along with the womb lining.

2007-03-23 09:03:05 · answer #3 · answered by Nebulous 6 · 0 0

The DNA you enquire about is never in the female animal. At first it is in the nucleus of the sperm cell. When that sperm cell fuses with the first available ovum, it becomes part of that, and then the two combined cells and genetic information become the zygote, or foetus which is another organism. Any let over sperm is discharged from the vagina.

2007-03-23 23:08:36 · answer #4 · answered by J? 3 · 0 0

the offspring recieves half of the father and half of the mothers dna and never stays in the female all the time
once a female has another mate the dna will be provided by the new partner and so on,,,,,

2007-03-23 08:58:47 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

No the sperm fertilises the egg, then all of its other rival sperms who I refer to as the "losers" will just die. Tough luck for them i'm afraid, women can wash themselves afterwards to rid themselves of this excess dying sperm, so it doesn't remain in the body. The baby receives part of the male DNA, but the female cannot be altered in anyway by it.

2007-03-23 20:43:32 · answer #6 · answered by Captain Heinrich 3 · 1 0

the fathers dna never becomes part of the mother it combines with her dna in the child but it is not a part of her. only the baby contains both their dna

2007-03-23 09:18:55 · answer #7 · answered by tamara 6 · 0 0

NO. it is never actually biological in a female to begin with. it is in the egg. it is only geographically in the female.

2007-03-23 16:46:46 · answer #8 · answered by t. H 1 · 0 0

no. DNA is carried to the egg

2007-03-24 15:00:33 · answer #9 · answered by steven2008 2 · 0 0

lol, for all of 9 months because of the baby

2007-03-23 08:54:31 · answer #10 · answered by KnOwLeDgE_iS_PoWeR 3 · 0 0

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