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Is sperm good for the female skin

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Uric acid, salt,alcohol, chlorine and zinc are not exactly known for making your skin healthy, but it also don’t hurt it. ChaCha! [ Source: http://www.chacha.com/question/is-sperm-good-for-the-female-skin ]
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Is sperm good for the female skin
http://www.chacha.com/question/is-sperm-good-for-the-female-skin
Uric acid, salt,alcohol, chlorine and zinc are not exactly known for making your skin healthy, but it also don’t hurt it. ChaCha!
Does sperm clear the female skin?
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20070828103922AAbXjfY
No; sounds like something a guy would tell a girl, though.

Related Questions Answered on Y!Answers

is sperm good for my skin ?
Q: is sperm good for my skin and if i swallow is it good for me ?also will the latent levels of testosterone in sperm affect my natural female levels of testosterone ?thanks in advance x x x
A: if it was good for your skin would someone not have bottled it by now, and made a fortune selling itReally, I’ve no idea, but I think I’d prefer using a product that’s designed for your skin, and sperm is designed for making babies
what temperature does sperm die?
Q: lol ok, i wanted to know what temp. sperm dies, well, in total, if a guy came over a bathtub of hot water that a female was in (who was ovulating at the time) is there scientifically any way she could get pregnant from sperm in the bath water or would the temperature kill sperm or cant they swim that fast? lol er, thanks!also, is it just a myth sperm is good for skin? (well, may as well ask while im here.. lol) thanks(um, NOT trying to conceive clearly.. !)
A: I would say that there is very little to worry about!!!The temperature must be about 94F (35 C) for sperm to live. The temperature can only vary by one to two degrees before the sperm will start dying. So pretty much 92F and below or 96F and above are fatal temperatures to sperm. So, unless the bath was cooler than body temperature then it’s unlikely that the sperm would survive.Now lets just say for arguments sake that the temperature of the bath was perfect for sperm, well then you have to figure in things like bubble bath or soap or shower gel. Any of these would destroy sperm.Now lets say there was no shower gel or soap etc, and that the temp of the water was perfect for sperm. Well you have to imagine that at least a few 100,000 of those sperm end up in her vagina, and then survive the swim up to her fallopian tubes, and catch the egg in the 24-48 hours before it dies.So, yes technically it is possible for her to be pregnant, BUT the odds are stacked very much against it.Now about the “sperm as a beauty product”, there are a few nutrients in healthy sperm, zinc, vitamin C, vitamin B12, but really it’s 95% water, and the levels are so very low.It wouldn’t do anyone any harm, but it’s unlikely to have noticable benefits. I did read a study a while back about rats having glossier coats, but that’s when they injested sperm. So if you want a glossy coat, and you’re a rat then maybe!!
Is this good for my science essay?
Q: Blue-Ringed OctopusThe blue-ringed octopi (genus Hapalochlaena) are three (or perhaps 4) octopus species that live in tide pools in the Pacific Ocean, from Japan to Australia. It is found in shallow coral and rock pools , particularly after storms, digging around for crabs. The octopus has a small beak at the junction of its eight arms, and rather than manufacturing ink, it makes poison in its salivary glands. The toxin closely resembles tetradotoxin and its bite can produce a flaccid paralysis much quicker than eating puffer fish. Despite their small size and relatively docile nature, they are currently recognized as one of the world’s most venomous animals. They are recognized by their characteristic blue and black rings and yellowish skin. The blue-ringed octopus is the size of a golf ball but its poison is powerful enough to kill an adult human in minutes. There’s no known antidote. There is no blue-ringed octopus antivenom available. The only treatment is hours of heart massage and artificial respiration until the poison has worked its way out of your system. The poison is not injected but is contained in the octopus’s saliva, which comes from two glands each as big as its brain. Poison from the one is used on its main prey, crabs, and is relatively harmless to humans. Poison from the other gland serves as defense against predators. The blue-ringed octopus either secretes the poison in the vicinity of its prey, waits until it is immobile and then devours it, or it jumps out and envelops the prey in its 8 tentacles and bites it. There are three confirmed species of Hapalochlaena, and a fourth is still under research. One of them are called “Greater Blue-ringed Octopus (Hapalochlaena lunulata)”. Another one is called “Southern Blue-ringed Octopus or Lesser Blue-ringed Octopus (Hapalochlaena maculosa)”. A third one is called “Blue-lined Octopus (Hapalochlaena fasciata)”. And finally, a possible fourth one which is still under research is called “Hapalochlaena nierstraszi” – described in 1938 from a single specimen from the Bay of Bengal; the validity of this taxon has been questioned. An individual blue-ringed octopus tends to use its dermal chromatophore cells to camouflage itself until provoked, at which point it quickly changes color, becoming bright yellow with blue rings or lines. It hunts small crabs, hermit crabs, and shrimp, and may bite attackers, including humans, if provoked or stepped on. Their diet typically consists of small crab and shrimp, but they may also feed on fish if they can catch them. They pounce on their prey, paralyze them with venom and use their beaks to tear off pieces. They then suck out the flesh from the crustacean’s exoskeleton. In laboratory conditions they have been observed to engage in cannibalism, however this has not been recorded in the wild. The Blue Ring Octopus also defends itself using its poisons. Like other octopuses, it lives in dens, spaces under rocks, crevices on the sea floor, or holes it digs under large rocks. It piles rocks to block the front of its den. The den protects the octopus from predators (like moray eels) and provides a place to lay eggs and care for them (a mother octopus doesn’t eat during the entire 1 to 2 months she is caring for her eggs). In order to escape predators, an octopus can squirt black ink into the water, allowing the octopus to escape. The octopus swims by spewing water from its body, a type of jet propulsion. A male mates with a female by grabbing her mantle, which sometimes completely obscures the female’s vision, then transferring sperm packets by inserting his hectocotylus into her mantle cavity over and over again. Mating continues until the female has had enough, and in at least one species the female has to remove the over-enthusiastic male by force. Males will attempt copulation with members of their own species regardless of sex or size, however interactions between males are most often shorter in duration and end with the mounting octopus withdrawing the hectocotylus without packet insertion or struggle. Blue-ringed octopus females lay only one clutch of about fifty eggs in their lifetime towards the end of Autumn. Eggs are laid then incubated underneath the female’s arms for approximately six months, and during this process she will not eat. After the eggs hatch, the female dies, and the new offspring will reach maturity and be able to mate by the next year. While resting, the blue-ringed octopus is a pale brown to yellow color depending on its surroundings. But when alarmed, this octopus displays bright blue rings all over its body and Hapalochlaena lunulata carries enough venom to kill 26 adult humans within minutes. Symptoms include: nausea, vision loss and blindness, loss of senses, loss of motor skills, and respiratory arrest. When disturbed or taken out of the water, the colors of a blue-ringed octopus will brighten dramatically, as the colors darken and the blue rings take on an almost electric hue. The
A: There is a lot of interesting information here but the presentation would be better if you used paragraphs and kept all your comments about for example the venomous nature of the blue-ringed octopus and the treatment for a bite together … I think you mentioned it at three different parts of your essay. I think there was a contradiction too … at one part you said the b-r octopus doesn’t make ink but further on you said that they can escape predators by squirting black ink into the water … maybe these points could be brought together and explained better … or if it’s something the b-r octopus doesn’t do then leave out the ink squirting bit.I’d probably suggest that you go through the essay and structure it better … get all the info for a certain point and keep it together in one or two paragraphs … that way you won’t be repeating stuff and will make for a better read. I think you should have a more definite introduction and add a conclusion because your essay just stops without actually concluding.The introduction could briefly describe what you are going to be talking about in the body of the essay.The body is where you go into greater detailFinally the conclusion can sum up the major points you’ve covered in the bodyAlso if your teacher has given you an outline of what they want for an essay then make sure you follow it, otherwise it doesn’t matter how good the info is your grade will be affected especially if they’re grading it by some sort of criteria.
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