Friday, January 17, 2014

Finding Nemo

Watching the animals in the movie all work together to try and find Nemo reminded me of biology instantly, actually. I think I can relate this movie to every theme of biology that we've covered. Or maybe, I can relate this movie to the whole of biology in general. I saw this movie a little bit differently now that I watched it again in Bio 11 since the many time I have seen it since I was very little. I realize now that Biology isn't just about studying life. It's about piecing together how everything in this world is connected and how we all help each other grow and evolve. 

This movie never gets old.

FINAL QUESTION #2

My best Blog Post:

Why I chose it:
 
After doing this post is when I realized what this class was really going to be about. It wasn't just about test scores and projects, we were actually going to be doing research and LEARNING things by asking questions and having genuine curiosity. It set the tone for the rest of the semester for me, and I realized that this would be independent learning. I also picked this post because I just found this to be so incredibly cool!

What did I learn from it:

I learned that animals have some very interesting survival tools and can evolve into some really freaky things. I learned how some animals can go to such lengths such as breaking their bones to stay alive. Survival instincts are so interesting and this was a clear example to me of what crazy defense mechanisms can look like. 

What stands out about this post:

IT IS A FROG THAT BREAKS ITS BONES AND USES THEM AS A WEAPON.
That stands out to me a lot. What also stands out is the fact that this post (where we all had to find an interesting animal) made me some new friends. I remember we were talking about our different animals that we chose and why we chose them. 

Relation to main theme:

I think that this relates to evolution. Animals are constantly evolving to better suit their environment. To stay alive in its environment, this frog has adapted unique survival skills which result in combat. It will fight to its death if it feels threatened or is preyed upon. Evolution has given this animal the ability to break its bone to use them as weapons as well as a fake thumb that it can retract to use as a weapon, too.
Evolution is an extremely interesting concept, and for someone who is scared of change, I loved learning about change and how change can be good.

FINAL QUESTION #1


ROUNDWORM:

EVOLUTION/ NATURAL SELECTION:

The evolutionary ancestors of roundworms had a bi-directional digestive system In other words, they took in food, digested it, and distributed the nutrients through channels where they could be directly absorbed by tissues. Whatever waste was left over was expelled through the mouth. In other words, their digestive systems were just sacs. Roundworms evolved to have a unidirectional digestive system. Food is taken in through the mouth, processed in a long tube where nutrients are absorbed into tissues. The waste is excreted from the anus.

CHARACTERISTICS:


*Feeding

-Roundworms eat little growths such as fungi when they are in soil. The parasite, roundworm, will eat bodily fluids from the host. This includes blood and mucus.

*Digestion:

-digest their food by having a tubular digestive system. This means that it has openings at both ends, for ingesting food and removing wastes respectively. They do not have the stomach, therefore the food is taken directly into the intestines where enzymes are produced to aid in the absorption of nutrients.

*Reproduction:

-Roundworms are parasites that depend on an animal or plant host for their survival. A roundworm reproduces by having a female that carries an egg and a male that fertilizes it. A single roundworm is capable of laying as much as 200,000 eggs in one day.

*Respiration:

-Roundworms (nematodes) do not contain a respiratory system. Their cells give off carbon dioxide and pick up oxygen from the moist environment. If they are placed in a dry environment they will die.


*Circulation:

-A roundworm has no heart or blood vessels. 

*Nervous System:

-Four peripheral nerves run the length of the body on the dorsal, ventral, and lateral surfaces. Each nerve lies within a cord of connective tissue lying beneath the cuticles and between the muscle cells





THE DISSECTION:

*Missed the dissection; watching the dissection video instead.

EARTHWORM:


EVOLUTION/NATURAL SELECTION:

Worms began as relatively simple organisms that lived in aqueous habitats. Indeed, when the evolution of animals began some 600 million years ago, the primary habitat of all living organisms was the sea. Creatures lived in the ocean, on the surface of the ocean floor, or slightly beneath the muddy ocean floor

CHARACTERISTICS: 


*Feeding:

-Earthworms eat decaying animals and roots and plants. Some people say that worms eat the dirt it self, which is not part of there nutrition and is expelled.

*Digestion:
-An earthworm has a digestive system. It eats dirt, digesting the plant and animal matter in the dirt and then eliminates the rest. It has an esophagus for the food to go down, a crop to store the food in, a gizzard that grinds the food down, intestines for the food to pass through and take out nutrients and an anus for the food to come out. 

*Reproduction:

-earthworms must mate to reproduce, even though one earthworm contains both male and female reproductive organs. Eggs are formed in a slime tube that slips over the worm's head and forms a cocoon or capsule that incubates them. Eggs develop into tiny worms in the cocoon and crawl out through one end when ready to emerge.

*Respiration:

-Earthworms breathe through their moist skin. Gas exchange takes place directly there.

*Circulation:

-a closed circulatory system, meaning that its blood is confined to blood vessels and its blood is recirculated so it gets maximum use. An earthworm has no lungs but uses its body's surface area to absorb oxygen from the soil. The oxygen is taken in by the dorsal blood vessel and travels to the five aortic hearts by the esophogus where it is pumped to the lower, ventral blood vessel.

*Nervous System:

-The nervous system of the earthworm is "segmented" just like the rest of the body. The "brain" is la bunch of nerve tissue/sensory tissue. The brain is important for movement: if the brain of the earthworm is removed, the earthworm will move continuously. Each segment gets sensory information from only a local region of its body and controls muscles only in this local region.



THE DISSECTION:
-looked very straight forward and simple on the inside
-saw one long tube which had all the organs in/around it
-felt squishy on the inside
-saw dirt inside


GRASSHOPPER:

EVOLUTION/NATURAL SELECTION:
Grasshoppers have evolved to be quick and jump powerfully and long distance because they are preyed upon by most species. However, this has caused for predators to also evolve over time making it an endless cycle.

  
   
CHARACTERISTICS:

*Feeding:
-Grasshoppers are herbivores, which means they are plant eaters. Their food choices depend on the location: It can range from grass, trees and shrubs found in residential neighborhoods to farmers' crops. Any type of vegetation suits their appetite.

-two sets of lips/jaws/sharp and powerful teeth


*Digestion:
-Much of the digestive system of a grasshopper is similar to that of a human. Food is taken in through the mouth and expelled through the anus in the form of feces. Along the way it passes through three different guts and is broken down through a process of chewing and digestive juices.

*Reproduction:
-Grasshoppers reproduce sexually. During fertilization the male places a sperm packet into the females reproductive organ. Once the eggs are fertilized the female deposits the eggs into the ground.
-Grasshoppers reproduce after mating by having the female lay about 8-25 eggs in a layer of foam that she excretes, that forms a protective shell around the eggs. The eggs hatch and go through a process called incomplete metamorphosis where they shed their skins 5-6 times. 

*Respiration:
-help of trachea
-air filled tubes that are open at the surfaces of the thorax along with their abdomen with the help of a pair of spiracles. 
-spiracles are a kind of valves that allow oxygen to enter and carbon dioxide to escape.

*Circulation:
-Grasshoppers have open circulatory systems, with most of the body fluid filling body cavities and appendages
-the one closed organ called the dorsal vessel extends from the head through the thorax to the anus. It is a continuous tube with two regions: the heart, which is connected to the abdomen; and the aorta, which goes from the heart to the head through the thorax. 

*Nervous system:
-The grasshopper's nervous system is controlled by ganglia which are loose groups of nerve cells that are found in most species. In grasshoppers, there are ganglia in each segment as well as a larger set of sensory tissue in the head, which would be considered the brain

 THE DISSECTION:
-Very hard shell
-distinguished it to be female from the shape of the hind
-could clearly see all organs
-SMELLED TERRIBLE 


STARFISH:

EVOLUTION/NATURAL SELECTION:
The fossil record for starfish is ancient, dating back to the Ordovician around 450 million years ago, but it is rather poor, as starfish tend to disintegrate after death. Only the ossicles and spines of the animal are likely to be preserved, making remains hard to locate. 
Their reproductive organs have evolved over time that the starfish can now reproduce even though it is fragmented.

CHARACTERISTICS:

*Feeding:
- the starfish turns its stomach inside out, drops it over the prey’s body, then draws it in again when the prey is nearly digested along with its digestive juices

*Digestion:
-digest food through their stomach: the cardiac and pyloric. In the pyloric stomach digestive enzymes are secreted to help in the absorption of nutrients. A starfish's diet includes small fishes, clams, and algae.

*Reproduction:
-Starfish are able to reproduce both sexually and asexually. There are both male and female starfish and fertilization takes place externally. Some species of starfish may be able to reproduce if they become fragmented. 

*Respiration:
-Starfish breathe through two mechanisms. They have papulae that are things that dot the surface of their skin to allow oxygen from the water in and tube feet that scatter around the body surface which do the same thing

*Circulation:
-simple circulation
-The starfish has radial canals that go through all the legs and join in the center to make the water vascular system that functions as a circulatory system, waste removal and more

*Nervous system:
-The central nervous system of a starfish consists of a radial nerve running the length of each ray
-nerve ring that connects the radial nerves. 
-the nerve ring doesn't seem able to do any kind of processing of information. Instead, all the sensory information must go to the radial nerves, any memories must be stored in the radial nerves, and any decisions about what to do must be made in the radial nerves. Somehow, the five different radial nerves must coordinate those decisions if the starfish is going to get anywhere


THE DISSECTION:
-thought it would be hard, very squishy
-had white dots all over the surface
-was able to pop the stomach in and out
-the gonads were visible on the inside 
-able to isolate the stomach and look at it



THE FROG!!!

EVOLUTION/NATURAL SELECTION:
Frogs were considered water animals until they soon evolved to become amphibians, meaning they can live in water and on land. They also evolved into having teeth, making it easier to live on land and eat their prey.

CHARACTERISTICS:

*Feeding:
-Frogs start off as tadpoles, eating mostly leafy greens and algae.  Eventually they step it up and begin to eat insects and other easy prey.  By the time they reach adult status, frogs are strictly carnivores.
-use their sticky tongues to catch prey

*Digestion
-Frogs digest food using digestive enzymes in the stomach. Once that process is done, the food continues to move to the small intestine to do most of the digestion.

*Reproduction
-Frogs reproduce through external fertilization. The female frog lays the eggs in water in a slimy mass. The male frog swims over and fertilizes the eggs after they've been lain. The eggs then hatch into tadpoles that will later grow into adult frogs.

*Respiration:
-Frogs can breathe through their lungs and skin. While swimming underwater, frogs can breathe by absorbing oxygen through their skin. This process is called cutaneous gas exchange.

*Circulation:
-Frogs have three-chambered hearts
-oxygenated blood from the lungs and de-oxygenated blood from the respiring tissues enter the heart through separate atria. When these chambers contract, the two blood streams pass into a common ventricle before being pumped via a spiral valve to the appropriate vessel, the aorta for oxygenated blood and pulmonary artery for deoxygenated blood. The ventricle is divided into cavities which lowers the mixing of the two types of blood

*Nervous system
-frog has a highly developed nervous system that consists of a brain, spinal cord and nerves. Many parts of the frog's brain correspond with those of humans. It consists of two olfactory lobes, two cerebral hemispheres, a pineal body, two optic lobes, a cerebellum and a medulla oblongata. 
-size of the cerebrum in frogs is much smaller than it is in humans. Frogs have ten pairs of cranial nerves which pass information from the outside directly to the brain, and ten pairs of spinal nerves which pass information from the extremities to the brain through the spinal cord


THE DISSECTION:
-my favourite dissection
-able to look at EACH organ specifically
-extremely colourful
-had so much fat, it was clearly eating huge flies
-able to open mouth and see tongue/teeth
-able to open eyelid
-I feel like I have now completed a right of high school passage: the frog dissection.

Monday, January 13, 2014

Starfish Dissection

Outside Observations:
- red/pink
- white dots
- sort of "smushy"

Inside Observations:
- yellow/orange mush
- pink on the inside
- stomach is visible





 Bottom of Starfish (mouth in the center)




 Leg of Starfish





Inside of leg of Starfish with gonads visible





Inside the bottom of the Starfish

Frog Dissection

 webbed feet


 inside organs


 view of inside organs


 close up


 opened mouth


 view of teeth


 eyelid


 first layer of skin revealing abdomen


underside


top side

Thursday, January 9, 2014

GRASSHOPPER DISSECTION


Questions that Mrs. Phillips asked:







TARSUS (where scalpel is pointing):




FEMUR (where scalpel is pointing):





TIBIA (where scalpel is pointing):






ABDOMEN:




HEAD:





INTERIOR VIEW:




Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Golden Tortoise Beetle

Interesting Fact:
The magnificent golden tortoise beetle is commonly found in eastern North America and measures five to seven millimeters in length. The beetle has an extraordinary golden hue but it can change its color as well—transforming its outer covering so it becomes transparent. This color change reveals the rest of the beetle underneath, which is black with red spots, like a ladybug. Once these beetles are collected and removed from their natural habitats, they quickly lose their color, turning mud brown. This is because they lose their liquid layer, which is formed by dew on the leaves they live on. This liquid layer gives the illusion of a golden color. Like a chameleon, it can change the golden hue to different colours to match its environment.

How It's Survived:
The camouflage trick that is has adapted, to change colour, has helped it hide and causes it's success in its environment.

How It Is Helpful to Environment:
It isn't! It's a pest; it feeds off of farmer's sweet potatoes and seeds. It kills potatoes!