Until about the ninth week of gestational age, Even after differentiation can be seen between the sexes, some stages are common, e.g. the disappearing of the membrane. On the other hand, sex-dependent development include further protrusion of the genital tubercle in the male to form the
glans and
shaft of the penis and in the female, the
glans and
body of the clitoris. The labioscrotal swellings evolve into the
scrotum in males, and into the
labia majora (dissipated in non-primates) in females.
Common development Before differentiation Urogenital membrane There is initially a
cloacal membrane, composed of ectoderm and endoderm, reaching from the
umbilical cord to the tail, separating the cloaca from the exterior. After the separation of the rectum from the dorsal part of the cloaca, the ventral part of the cloacal membrane becomes the
urogenital membrane.
Genital tubercle Mesoderm extends to the
midventral line for some distance behind the umbilical cord, and forms the lower part of the abdominal wall; it ends below in a prominent swelling, the cloacal tubercle, which after the separation of the rectum becomes the
genital tubercle. Dorsally, to this tubercle the sides are not really fused. Rather, the urogenital part of the cloacal membrane separates the ingrowing sheets of mesoderm.
Phallus The genital tubercle develops into the
primordial phallus, the first rudiment of the
penis or
clitoris.
Urogenital opening In both sexes, the phallic portion of the
urogenital sinus extends on to the under surface of the cloacal tubercle as far forward as the apex. At the apex, the walls of the phallic portion come together and fuse, obliterating the
urogenital opening. Instead, a solid plate, the urethral plate, is formed. The remainder of the phallic portion is for a time tubular, and then, by the absorption of the urogenital membrane, it establishes a communication with the exterior. This opening is for a while the primitive urogenital opening, and it extends forward to the corona glandis.
After differentiation The following developments occur in both males and females, although a difference in the development between the sexes already can be seen: • The
corpus cavernosum penis, and the
corpus cavernosum of clitoris, and the
corpus spongiosum penis arise from the mesodermal tissue in the phallus; they are at first dense structures, but later vascular spaces appear in them, and they gradually become cavernous. closes from behind forward. Meanwhile, the urethral plate of the glans breaks down centrally to form a median groove continuous with the primitive ostium. This groove also closes from behind forward, leaving only a small pipe running in the middle of the penis. Thus, the urogenital opening is shifted forward to the end of the glans. ==Diagram of internal differentiation==