behavior of microorganisms

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Behavior of Microorganisms Hydra, Planaria, Paramecium

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Behavior of Microorganisms. Hydra, Planaria, Paramecium. Dissecting Scope. Usually 10X eyepiece Usually 2X to 4x objective. Illumination System:. Usually lights switches can turn lights to shine above or below the specimen. Illumination. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Behavior of Microorganisms

Behavior of Microorganisms

Hydra, Planaria, Paramecium

Page 2: Behavior of Microorganisms

Dissecting Scope

Usually 10X eyepiece

Usually 2X to 4x objective

Page 3: Behavior of Microorganisms

Illumination System:

• Usually lights switches can turn lights to shine above or below the specimen

Page 4: Behavior of Microorganisms

Illumination

• Transmitted light from below through thin specimen (like a fly wing)

• Reflected light from above for opaque objects (like a penny)

Page 5: Behavior of Microorganisms

Dissecting scope

• Does not invert the object

• Does not have to be transparent or translucent

e

Letter “e” appears the same as how you put it under the lens

Page 6: Behavior of Microorganisms

What happens?

• Move the ‘e’ to the right…it looks like it is going to the right as you look through the lens…

• There is no inversion.

•e

Page 7: Behavior of Microorganisms

Look at colored print

• What did you see when you put colored newspaper print under the lens?

• ANSWER: A lot of colored dots

Page 8: Behavior of Microorganisms

Hydra viridis

Two layers of cells which make up the body of a Hydra polypThe outer clear layer (the ectoderm) is the one which contains the nematocysts, or stinging cells.

Page 9: Behavior of Microorganisms

Contracted, the hydra looks like a tiny cactus. Its colorcomes from symbiotic algae living in the hydra's tissues.

Page 10: Behavior of Microorganisms

Hydra StretchedFully extended, its tentacles sweeping the water for its prey, the hydra reaches a height up to two inches.

Page 11: Behavior of Microorganisms

Hydra Bud Snares a Cyclops with its

tentacles, a hydra bud snares a Cyclops, a tiny,

one-eyed crustacean, also named after an

ancient Greek monster. The bell-shaped

protrusion on the hydra's body (upper left) is a second hydra bud.

Page 12: Behavior of Microorganisms

Tentacles curled, a hydra is

ingesting its prey. Its mouth is

at right.

Page 13: Behavior of Microorganisms

• The hydra is at rest, digesting its meal.

Page 14: Behavior of Microorganisms

A mature bud has extended itself into a long stalk and is about to pinch itself off and depart.

Page 15: Behavior of Microorganisms

Good Luck, Little Buddy!

• One hydra bud somersaults away from its parent as another grows. Hydras often have four buds at a time.

Page 16: Behavior of Microorganisms

Is it worth it?

• When autumn arrives, bringing conditions that threaten the survival of the hydra, it ceases to replace itself and goes

sexual. For the hydra, the price of sex is usually death!

Page 17: Behavior of Microorganisms

• In the image shown right you will see the male organs just behind the arms; the female organ, much larger, is situated a bit lower on the animal.

Page 18: Behavior of Microorganisms

• In the image shown right the sperm is oozing out of the male organ, in the image shown below a ripe egg is visible.

Page 19: Behavior of Microorganisms

• The egg is coming from the parent.

Page 20: Behavior of Microorganisms

Nerve Net

• Hydra have a simple nerve-net which connects with the stinging cells in the tentacles.

Page 21: Behavior of Microorganisms

Earthworm

• . Cephalization – has a brain (that co-ordinates the information coming into it from the sensory cells. It then sends information to the muscle cells and other tissues through a network of nerve cells.)

Page 22: Behavior of Microorganisms

Hydra

•                          Drawing #3 - Put a living Hydra in a drop of water on a depression slide. If there are no living Hydra available use a  longitudinal section ( l.s.) slide.  Hydra only display the polyp body form.                         

Page 23: Behavior of Microorganisms

• Planarians are hermaphroditic, that is, they contain both male and female sex organs. They can reproduce asexually simply by pinching in half; each half grows a new half.

Page 25: Behavior of Microorganisms

• Drawing #4 - Whole mount of discharged nematocysts (stinging structure found within cnidocytes).  You must use high power (450X) to see these.