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Rat Dissection. Dissection Equipment. Tray. T pins. Dissection Equipment. Forceps. Scissors. Dissection Equipment. Probe. Scalpel. GLOVES!. You do NOT have to wear gloves. The school does not provide them, so I have to buy them with my own money.
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Dissection Equipment Tray T pins
Dissection Equipment Forceps Scissors
Dissection Equipment Probe Scalpel
GLOVES! • You do NOT have to wear gloves. • The school does not provide them, so I have to buy them with my own money. • Which means….if you want a glove, you must purchase one from me for 25 cents OR bring your own. • If you don’t plan on touching the rat, you don’t need any.
To receive a grade I have to check off your CLEAN and DRIED equipment to make sure everything is accounted for. You must also clean your table with cleaner and paper towels. TRASH goes in the TRASH CAN (what a concept-its like two steps away) AND WASH YOUR HANDS!!!!
1. What is this large internal rat organ underneath the lungs and heart?
Rat Taxonomy Domain: Kingdom: Phylum: Class: Order: Eukaryota Animalia Chordata Mammalia Rodentia
Rat Tidbit: In Western countries, many people keep rats as pets. They usually have more unusual coloring and are gentler than wild rats, but domesticated are more disease prone.
Rat Tidbit: The Black Plague is believed to have been spread by rat-borne parasites. This pandemic peaked during 1348-1350 and killed approximately 100 million world wide.
Rat Tidbit: Albino rats (like the ones we are dissecting) are frequently subjects of medical, psychological, and other biological testing. In October 2003, researchers succeeded in cloning two lab rats.
Rat Tidbit: A month in a rat’s life is equal to 2.5 human years. Domestic rats usually live around 3 years, but wild rats tend to live for less than a year.
Rat Tidbit: Rats cannot vomit or burp. This is for three reasons: 1. Rats have a powerful barrier between their esophagus and their stomach. 2. Vomiting requires the two muscles of the diaphragm contract independently, and rat’s don’t do that. 3. Rats don’t have complex connections in the brain to coordinate the many muscles involved in vomiting.