placenta

     

The placenta (Latin for cake, from Greek plakoenta, accusative of plakoeis - πλακοείς, "flat", referencing its appearance in humans) is an ephemeral organ present in placental vertebrates, such as eutherial mammals an sharks during gestation (pregnancy). Protherial (egg-laying) and metatherial (marsupial) mammals do not produce a placenta. The placenta develops from the same sperm and egg cells that form the fetus, and functions as a foetomaternal organ with two components, the foetal part (Chorion frondosum), and the maternal part (Decidua basailis).

Trivia about placenta

  • In the womb a baby receives nourishment from this, also called the afterbirth
  • The umbilical cord connects the baby to this organ, which is attached to the mom's uterus
  • From the Greek for "flat cake", this uterine wall organ connects to the fetus via the umbilical cord