top of page

Biology- ALL

Public·17 members

Rico the Lab Rat
Inaugural Class!

Lab Rats since 2018

HOMEWORK 26: Post Here

:)

108 Views
erinfloyd101
18 hours ago

for Emerson


Rico the Lab Rat
Inaugural Class!

Lab Rats since 2018

Day 8 Quail Egg Candling

I’ve candled all your eggs and am including an updated spreadsheet.

The FLAG means I saw signs of fertilization.

The M means I saw movement.

The X means I saw no sign of fertilization.

The ? means I couldn’t confirm fertilization.


46 Views
Rico the Lab Rat
Rico the Lab Rat
20 hours ago

Day 13 Candling.

Some eggs that previously appeared fertilized may now be marked with a "?". This could mean they're late bloomer or there's been some arrested development. The "F" notation means the egg appears FULL, and is nearly impermeable to light except for the air cell at the blunt end of the egg.


Rico the Lab Rat
Inaugural Class!

Lab Rats since 2018

BONUS- Pig brain!

As the lab did not include accessing the brain, I took some time to do so before pitching our specimens. Our pigs were so large and mature that their skulls were much better ossified (hardened) than any I’ve dealt with in the past. It took a fair amount of work to remove the skull cap.


32 Views
Kotoriiesai
5 days ago

dang it, I wanted to see pig brains. The video won't play.

Rico the Lab Rat
Inaugural Class!

Lab Rats since 2018

What’s an allograph?

So, at my appointment yesterday I scheduled my bone graft for next Thursday, 3/19.


I’ll be receiving an allograph. This means the bone my surgeon will be using to correct the defect (huge hole) in my jaw will be human bone coming from a donor, and not my own body. The donor may be a cadaver (deceased organ donor). The bone might also come from a living donor. Femur heads from living patients undergoing a hip replacement are sometimes a source of donor bone.


Whether from a living or deceased donor, the bone will be throughly sterilized and processed. During the processing, they remove all cells and DNA, leaving behind only the bone scaffolding within which the osteocytes (bone cells) used to live. The scaffolding is composed of collagen and minerals such as hydroxyapatite. There are different ways to go about processing the bone, some of which include repeated freezing…


16 Views

Members

©2019 by Danielle Startt. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page