The egg is surrounded by protective membranes, which may be soft and jellylike or hard and calcified, like shells. Egg membranes are produced while the egg is either in the ovary or being carried away from the ovary in a tube called an oviduct. The eggs of many animals have both kinds of membranes. In insects, a hard shell (chorion) forms around the eggs in the ovaries. In frogs, a very thin vitelline membrane forms around the eggs in the ovary; subsequently a layer of jelly is deposited around the eggs while they pass through the oviducts. In birds, a very thin vitelline membrane is produced around the egg in the ovary; then several layers of secondary membranes are formed in the oviduct before the egg is laid. The outermost of these secondary membranes is the calcareous shell. In mammals the egg is surrounded by the so-called pellucid zone, which is equivalent to the vitelline membrane of other animals; follicle cells form an area called the corona radiata around this zone.
After fertilization the egg, now called a zygote, is endowed with genes from two parents and has begun actual development. (Activation of the egg may be brought about by an agent other than sperm in certain animals, but such cases of parthenogenesis are exceptional.