William Harvey & Sexual Reproduction in Deer
- William Harvey (1578 - 1657) was an English physician who contributed greatly to our understanding of anatomy and physiology
- He is mainly remembered for his work on the circulation of the blood, however, he also spent a lot of time studying how life passes from one generation to the next and conducted much research into sexual reproduction
- At the start of the 17th century there was very little understanding of how each sex; males and females, contributed to producing offspring
- The main hypothesis at the time was that the semen produced by males combined with the menstrual blood of females to form an 'egg', which would then develop into a foetus inside the mother
- William Harvey's work on understanding sexual reproduction involved testing this old hypothesis using animals, mainly deer
- His work included:
- Dissecting the uteruses, orĀ wombs, of female deer at all stages of pregnancy
- Harvey found that the uterus was always empty at the time of conception i.e. just after successful mating, disproving the hypothesis that semen and menstrual blood combined in the uterus to form a foetus
- Harvey expected to find 'eggs' developing in the uterus immediately after mating; instead, he only found something developing there two or more months after mating
- Dissecting the uteruses, orĀ wombs, of female deer at all stages of pregnancy
- Dissecting the ovaries of female deer throughout the mating season
- He found no sign of an 'egg'
- Note that he did not have access to a microscope during his work