Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Microscopic Life/Answer Key/es"
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Revision as of 17:55, 9 March 2021
La especialidad de Vida Microscópica es un componente de la Maestría Naturaleza. |
La especialidad de Vida Microscópica es un componente de la Maestría Zoología. |
La especialidad de Vida Microscópica es un componente de la Maestría Salud y Ciencia. |
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The magnification of a compound microscope is simply the magnification of the ocular lens times the magnification of the objective lens:
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- slide
- A slide is a small piece of rectangular glass upon which the specimen to be viewed is placed.
- coverslip
- The coverslip is a piece of glass the same shape as a slide (but often thinner) used to cover the specimen. The specimen is sandwiched between the slide and the coverslip.
- wetmount
- Wetmounting is when the user smears a wet specimen onto a slide.
- fixing
- Fixing preserves a specimen so that it does not decompose. Once a specimen has been fixed, it can be stored away and looked at again later.
- staining
- Staining colors the specimen so that it has a higher contrast and can be more easily seen under the microscope.
- oil immersion
- In order to get a sharp focus at magnifications above 400X, light must be coupled between the specimen and the objective by a layer of oil. If the light travels through air it gets too distorted.
- unicellular
- A unicellular organism has only one cell. This includes bacteria, many algae, amoebae, and many other organisms that cannot be seen with the naked eye.
- multicellular
- A multicellular organism is made up of more than one cell. This includes animals, insects, plants, and most other life that can be seen around us on a daily basis.
- cilia
- Cilia are small hair-like appendages around the edge of a cell which allows the cell to propel itself through water. Cells in the human body have cilia. The cilia in the respiratory tract move mucus with particles trapped out of the air we breathe back up into the throat.
- flagella
- A flagella is a whip-like structure at the end of a cell that allows it to swim through the water. This is the way that sperm swim. Many bacteria also have flagella for swimming through their environment.
- plankton
- Plankton are any type unicellular marine organism at the bottom of the food chain.
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You will have better luck with this in the summer than in the winter, though it is not difficult to find microscopic life even in the winter. Still water is more likely to harbor microscope life than swift water. Often scraping 'scum' off of rocks will yield an interesting specimen. If necessary, instruct your Pathfinders to harvest a piece of ice from a frozen puddle in the woods or in a ditch, and let it thaw out before coming to the meeting. Aquariums and flower vases are good sources of water laden with microscopic life. Another option is to seed some tap water and let it "marinate" for a week. You can seed the water with hay, straw, grass, or even dirt from the floor. Just don't get too gross!
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Referencias