قراءة كتاب Dissection of the Platana and the Frog

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Dissection of the Platana and the Frog

Dissection of the Platana and the Frog

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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injuring the kidneys and the reproductive organs.

Draw the complete alimentary canal.


Fig. 8.—Alimentary Canal of Xenopus and Rana.

Urinogenital System.

Note the kidneys, two elongated, flattened, dark-red bodies lying one on each side of the vertebral column towards the posterior end of the abdominal cavity. From the outer edge of each kidney a ureter arises and runs backward, opening into the cloaca on the dorsal side, opposite the opening of the urinary bladder.

[In the Frog the adrenal bodies may be seen on the ventral sides of the kidneys as small yellow patches.]

In the male Platana note:—

(a) The testes, a pair of ovoid pale-yellow bodies attached to the dorsal wall of the body cavity by a fold of the peritoneum. They lie on the ventral sides of the kidneys and are connected to them by efferent vessels which pass into the kidneys.

(b) The corpora adiposa or fatty bodies lying in front of the kidneys.

(c) The ureters which run along the outside of the kidneys and unite posteriorly to form a single duct opening into the cloaca.

[In the Frog the ureters do not join together but open separately into the cloaca. Each ureter has a slight swelling, the vesicula seminalis, on its outer side.]


Fig. 9—Male Urinogenital System of Xenopus and Rana.

In the female Platana note:—

(a) The ovaries, a pair of irregularly-lobed organs usually consisting of a mass of rounded black and white bodies, the ova. The ovaries are attached to the dorsal wall of the body cavity by a fold of the peritoneum.

(b) The corpora adiposa lying in front of the kidneys.

(c) The long convoluted oviducts opening into the body cavity in front and into the cloaca behind.

The ureters open separately into the cloaca in the female.

Make a drawing of the urinogenital system.


Fig. 10.—Female Urinogenital System of Xenopus and Rana.


Fifth Day.

Skeletal System (continued).

A. The Pectoral and Pelvic Girdles and Limbs.

1. Detach a fore-limb with the remaining parts of the pectoral girdle. Make a preparation showing these various parts:—

Supra-scapula, scapula, remainders of the clavicle and the coracoid, humerus, radio-ulna, carpal bones, and digits. Draw these parts.


Fig. 11.—Pectoral Girdle of Xenopus and Rana.

2. Detach the pelvic girdle from the transverse processes of the 9th vertebra. Remove it with the hind-limbs from the body. Detach the femur from one side of the pelvic girdle, and make a sketch showing the following parts of the pelvic girdle:—Acetabulum, ilium, ischium, and pubis.


Fig. 12.—Pelvic Girdle of Xenopus and Rana.

Make a preparation and a sketch showing the femur, tibia-fibula, astragalus, calcaneum and the other bones of the tarsal region, five metatarsals, and digits. Number the digits from the inner side.


Fig. 13.—Hind and Fore Limbs of Xenopus.

B. The Vertebral Column.

1. Remove the skin and muscles from the dorsal surface of the back to show the nine vertebræ and the urostyle. Make a drawing showing the vertebræ with their transverse processes, and the urostyle attached to the posterior end of the 9th vertebra.


Fig. 14.—Vertebral Column of Xenopus and Rana.

The 2nd, 3rd and 4th vertebræ bear long transverse processes curved backwards, those of the 3rd and 4th being tipped with small cartilaginous ribs. The transverse processes of the 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th vertebræ are slender and project forwards and outwards. The 9th vertebra has long flat wing-like processes attached to which are the ilia of the pelvic girdle. The urostyle is fused to the 9th vertebra.

[In the Frog the transverse processes are produced outwards and they do not bear cartilaginous ribs. The urostyle is attached to the 9th vertebra by two facets.]

Note the intervertebral foramina for the exit of the nerves from the spinal cord, and the intervertebral discs.

2. Remove, examine, and draw the 1st or atlas vertebra, note its ring-like form, absence of transverse processes, the concave facets by which it articulates with the two occipital condyles of the skull.

3. Remove, examine, and draw the 3rd vertebra and note the opisthocœlous centrum, neural arch and neural spine, anterior and posterior zygapophyses, the transverse processes, and the cartilaginous ribs.

[The centrum is procœlous in the Frog and there are no ribs.]

4. Remove and examine the 8th vertebra and note that the centrum is opisthocœlous. Make a drawing of a section showing the centrum.

[In the Frog the centrum is amphicœlous.]

5. Remove and examine the 9th vertebra or sacrum, and note that the centrum is slightly convex on the anterior surface. The urostyle is fused to the posterior surface of the 9th vertebra. Note also the long flat wing-like transverse processes.

[In the Frog the centrum is also convex anteriorly and on the posterior surface there are two convex facets for the articulation of the urostyle.]


Sixth Day.

Skeletal System (continued).

C. The Skull.

1. Remove the skin and other tissues from the top of the skull and observe the large fronto-parietals, nasals, supra-ethmoid, premaxillæ, maxillæ,

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