Biology, Frog Dissection Formal Lab Report 

Background: In the Biology class I took this year, we have to write a formal lab report every quarter. Formal Lab Reports usually take about 4-6 hours to complete not including time taken to perform the experiment. For the last quarter of the school year, we had to do a lot of dissections. The formal lab report for this quarter was on the frog I dissected. Take note, this lab report does not have anything gory about it but if you found dissecting animals in high school (if you are past high school) or if you think it is just gross then possibly read with caution. I hope you enjoy learning all about frogs!

Title: Frog Internal and External Anatomy Dissection

Name: Karibella Whitmore

Date: 5/7/2024

Purpose:  To locate and understand a common grass frog’s external features and internal organs.

Background:  

Frogs are some of the most interesting amphibians in the world. They breathe through their skin and can hibernate in cold weather! Frogs play an important part in their ecosystems.  They are good food for fish, birds, and snakes, and they also help control bug populations by eating bugs.  

The frog specimen that was dissected was from Kingdom Animalia, Phylum Chordata, Class Amphibia, Order Anura, Family Ranidaem, Genus Rana, and Species Forreri.  

Rana Forreri was discovered by Edward Drinker Cope. Cope was a famous paleontologist who also spent a lot of time studying reptiles and amphibians and tagging new species. William H. Forrer, a naturalist and collector, provided most of the information for Cope to name Rana Forreri. Rana Forreri is named after William H. Forrer.  Forrer collaborated with many famous scientists, providing them with specimens for their taxonomy work.  

Karen Lips is a professor of Biology at the University of Maryland.  She greatly contributed to the discovery of chytrid fungus, which uses frog skin to reproduce.  Many years ago, she lived in a jungle and studied the growth and reproduction of frogs.  She returned to the States to publish her findings but had to go back to the jungle for one more experiment.  When she returned to the jungle, all the frogs had disappeared.  She went to a different location in Panama to study more frogs, and while she was there, all the frogs began to get sick and die.  She sent some off to a lab, and a skin infection was found but was not identified.  The New York Times published a photo of the infection, and people in Australia and people from the Washington DC Zoo helped identify it as a fungus.  More research was conducted, and it was found to be Chytrid Fungus.  Karen Lips helped identify this fungus that is killing off frogs around the world.  

Another scientist who has been studying sick frogs is Tyrone Hayes. Hayes majored in Biology at Harvard and was hired to study the effects of the herbicide Atrazine on frogs. His research found that atrazine inhibited the growth of the larynx in male frogs. More research found that the male frogs exposed to the atrazine developed female gonads and eggs and were able to fertilize them. The male frogs still had male gonads but were unable to fertilize eggs.  His discoveries have led to much controversy about atrazine and its effects on wildlife, ecosystems, and even humans.    

Experimental Procedure:  

I.  Materials:  

  • Dissection Tray
  • Dissection Scissors
  • Forceps
  • Scalpal
  • Two Dissection Probes
  • Plastic Exam Gloves
  • Dissection Pins
  • Frog Specimen
  • Face Mask (optional)
  • Eye Glasses (optional)

II. Safety Precautions:  

Be careful when cutting with scissors and scalpel.  Use precaution when moving pins.  Do not inhale or eat frog specimens.  Sharp tools should be kept away from children.  

III. Procedure:

  1. Make an incision with the dissection scissors starting at the anus on the ventral side and continuing to the area just below the shoulders.
  2. Make two identical incisions or the anterior side of the original incision running right to left.  Repeat on the posterior end of the original incision.  You should be able to pull back flaps of skin to see the internal organs.  If needed, gently cut away tissue holding the skin to the organs with a scalpel.
  3. If your frog is female, remove all the eggs to expose the internal organs. The eggs are small black-and-white dots.  
  4. Examine the internal organs and attempt to locate the heart, stomach, lungs, intestines, gonads, and other major organs.  
  5. Using the scissors, make an incision in the side of the stomach to see what the frog’s last meal was.  Frogs eat their food whole so you might be able to identify what is inside the stomach.
  6. To see the muscle in the frog’s leg, carefully make an incision starting near the anus and the original incision.  Gently cut only the skin and pull open the incision to see the muscles.  
  7. Once you are finished examining the frog, dispose of all organs and frog parts in a safe plastic bag.  
  8. Wash dissection tools and put them away for your next dissection.   

Data/Results:  

Data: (Must include 2 hand-drawn labeled diagrams of the specimen:  one external feature, one internal organ)

Discussion:  Explain the functions of features and organs you observed in the specimen. 

This experiment aimed to identify and find a frog’s internal organs and observe and identify the external features.  Inside the frog specimen, the heart, veins, arteries, intestine, stomach, gonads, eggs, muscles, and lungs were all observed.  The frog heart has three chambers and is used to circulate blood around the body.  It is connected to the rest of the body by veins arteries, and capillaries.  The frog has a closed circulatory system.  

The lungs are part of the respiratory system and help the frog breathe.  The skin and mouth also aid in the oxygenation of the frog’s blood.  The frog uses its skin to breathe during hibernation because it usually hibernates in mud.  

The intestine and stomach are part of the digestive system.  The stomach digests food and stores it, and the intestine further digests the food and secretes any waste through the anus.  

The gonads are part of the reproductive system and were female in this frog.  The eggs are undeveloped baby frogs that were not yet fertilized.  The muscles help the frog to move in various ways, whether jumping or swimming.  All these organs help the frog to live well and thrive.  

Conclusion:  Summarize the key things you learned about your specimen.

This experiment aimed to learn more about and identify the internal organs and external features of a frog. The most important things learned from this dissection were the internal anatomy of the frog, its role in the world, and that frogs eat their food whole, which provided a very interesting surprise for those dissecting.  Most of the internal organs were found and recorded, and all of the external features were found.  The student learned the importance of precision and carefulness while dissecting.  The student also learned that female frogs usually have very many eggs.  This dissection was a challenging and fun activity for a biology student and will hopefully be repeated by many biology students in the future!

Photo/Video:   Include a photo of you with your specimen.

References:  

Flynt, Sean. “Biologist Warns of Health Effects of Common Herbicide.” Samford University, 11 Apr. 2018, www.samford.edu/news/2018/04/Biologist-Warns-of-Health-Effects-of-Common-Herbicide.

“Lithobates Forreri (Boulenger, 1883) | Amphibian Species of the World.” Amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org, 10 May 2024, amphibiansoftheworld.amnh.org/Amphibia/Anura/Ranidae/Lithobates/Lithobates-forreri. Accessed 10 May 2024.

Schlecht, Volker, et al. “Video: Opinion | the Waiting.” The New York Times, 12 Dec. 2023, www.nytimes.com/video/opinion/100000009184500/the-waiting.html. Accessed 10 May 2024.

—. “Video: Opinion | the Waiting.” The New York Times, 12 Dec. 2023, www.nytimes.com/video/opinion/100000009184500/the-waiting.html. Accessed 10 May 2024.

Robinson, Roosevelt. “Nature’s Frogs.” Alabama Cooperative Extension System, 10 Apr. 2023, 

www.aces.edu/blog/topics/urban-extension/natures-frogs/#:~:text=Frogs%20are%20an%20integral%20part.

Formal Dissection Report Checklist

Check off each item under each category to verify you’ve included the information.

Background

  • checkedTopic Sentence
  • checkedIntroduced and explained the classification of your specimen.
  • checkedResearched three scientists who have contributed to our understanding of the specimen.  
    • checkedWho discovered it and how did they learn about how the specimen fits into the ecosystem?
    • checkedWhich scientists throughout history have added or changed our understanding of the specimen, experiments they performed and their conclusions.
    • checkedWhich scientist(s) used the specimen to further our understanding in various fields (medicine, space, sports, etc.) today and how are they applying it?
  • checkedNo personal pronouns.
  • checkedUsed complete sentences and correct grammar.
  • checkedUsed paragraph format.

Experimental Procedures

  • checkedListed materials (not in sentences)
  • checkedListed safety precautions (if any)
  • checkedListed Procedures 
    • checkedUsed my own words
    • checkedWrote steps as a numbered list, not a paragraph.
    • checked Clearly written so can be duplicated.

Data/Results

  • checked I included a labeled hand drawn diagram of the external features of the organism.
  • checked I included a labeled hand drawn diagram of the internal organs of the organism.
  • checkedMy labeled diagrams are clearly labeled and easy to read.
  • checkedMy labels are horizontal and straight.

Discussion

  • checkedRestated purpose.
  • checkedDiscussed the purpose and functions of the external features observed.  
  • checkedDiscussed the purpose and functions of the organs observed.  
  • checkedDiscussed how the organs are connected within a system.
  • checkedDiscussed how the systems are connected to each other.

Conclusion

  • checked Restated purpose in one sentence.
  • checked Summarized the key points/lessons learned about the specimen from doing this dissection.
  • checked Included how the specimen fits into its ecosystem.

Photo

  • checkedIncluded a photo with me included in the picture.

References

  • checked  Used the correct format to list sources, APA, or MLA format.
  • checked  Avoided summary sources (Textbooks, encyclopedias, Wikipedia, how stuff works, khan academy, etc.)
  • checked  Used websites that present detailed information, like college sites, research sites, sites dedicated to the topic.

A City Under A City: Rome and Ancient Rome

Wile in Italy we went to Rome! Who wouldn’t? In Rome we stayed in a quieter part of the city that was more residential. The place we stayed was really close to the Vatican but far from everything else. You might be thinking what is the Vatican?? This is what I said when my mom told us we were touring it.

Vatican City

The Vatican is the world’s smallest country. It is one city situated inside Rome. It’s borders are defined by a wall that was completed in 852 AD but was added on to for a little less than a thousand years. Inside we went to the Vatican museum, the Sistine Chapel, and later (on a different day) St. Peter’s Basilica.

In the Vatican museum we visited a lot of statues and paintings. There were hallways lined with ancient statues and intricately painted ceilings! One of the things we saw was a humongous bath tub (bigger than a hot tub), possibly belonging to the infamous Nero of Rome. We also visited the famous Raphael rooms. The large rooms that he painted over more than a decade. My favorite of the four, was the room with a wall painted with science on one side and across from it a wall depicting God and heaven. On the floor, there was the latin word Semper which means always or united forever. Showing that science and religion can go together! Right before we went into the Sistine Chapel, we learned a little bit about it. Our guide told us that Michelangelo was a sculptor, but the pope, in his time, asked him to paint the Sistine chapel, and he agreed. Entering the Sistine Chapel took my breath away. The entire place is painted from floor to ceiling! The front wall is a stunning blue with so many figures on it, all looking like they are moving. The ceiling was filled with so much detail that it made it hard to look at. All the characters hanging out up there was really cool to see. However, St.Peter’s Basilica beats the Sistine chapel in coolness by a lot.

If you want to visit St.Peter’s Basilica definitely go really early in the morning. Like be there before it opens. We went a few minutes after it opened and there was still a line as long as a line in disneyland. When we exited about an hour later there was a line stretching 3/4 the way around St. Peter’s square!! So, go in the early morning.

After we made it past the line we walked in and let me tell you, no matter how much you prepare yourself to be impressed by the size of the building, it will impress you more. It is just so huge that I wondered how could they possibly have built it! It is big enough to have several masses at once! There were two going when we were there. The domes are all so intricate and extravagant! It felt a little weird to be in a place that was so grand. It was also really cool to be above St.Peter! He actually got to hang out with Jesus so being that close to his grave was pretty awesome. Honestly if you travel to Rome you have to see St.Peters Basilica, it is really crazy awesome place!

The Colosseum and Ancient Roman Forum

Remember the Title? A city on top of a city? Well, I was talking about the Ancient Roman Forum. Just like Herculaneum the forum is surrounded by modern buildings on all sides. We were walking along a street and someone says look right. And sitting on the right is just a couple football (soccer) fields of ancient ruins! We got some amazing gelato right before our tour and then entered a city from thousands of years ago. The forum in any roman city is the center, the marketplace, the place for speeches, and religious ceremonies. The forum of Rome was Huge! The funny thing nowadays is that since everything is like 2000 years old a lot of buildings and structures have crumbled over time so on the ground there is just chunks of buildings and stone pillars or part of a wall. Some stone pillars were even being used as benches!

We walked through part of the forum on our tour but we were heading to the palace/fortress/hill. Our guide was calling it a hill with a building on it but it looked more like a building the size of a hill or a building made out of a hill. It was crazy to think that the intricate stone walkways were made by hand thousands of years ago. At the top of the hill palace was a gorgeous garden and a modern house built on the ruins by some princess a couple 100 years ago. after we walked by that, we headed toward the…….

Colosseum

Okay, the Colosseum was very cool, but it looks alot smaller from the outside than you would think. The cool thing about it is how sophisticated the system for it was. You had to have a ticket to enter and that ticket would correspond to a gate, section and a specific seat. The seats are gone now so it was really hard to imagine how thousands of people could have fit into the Colosseum to see games but apparently they did. There is a lot of stuff I learned so I am going to put it into list form.

  • Gladiators were not rich free men, they were slaves.
  • Slaves were not allowwed to see the games
  • Poor people were in the uppermost sections then women in the middle and then rich people in the bottom. The Romans had the backwards idea that women could not handle the sight of the games.
  • The reason the colosseum has only half of its outer wall is because there was an earthquake that felled half the wall and the material was quarried and used to build other buildings.
  • The romans had elevators in the floor! Ancient Elevators!!!!
  • The myth that the king decided whether or no the loser died with a thumbs up or a thumbs down is probably not true.

The whole time while i was walking thought eh colosseum i kept thinking, “how did they possibly build this???” It’s like so crazy that ancient people were so so so smart!


Photos From Rome



What Are Small, Cute, Sharp and Fluffy?

So three years ago for a random school project that I do not recall, we had to raise chickens. Baby ones. Me and my little brother raised four chickens named Dusty, Sorbet, Whitey and Hazel. Once they were bigger they were sent to live with our friends and since then Whitey was sadly wiped out by her fellow chickens. (The other chickens were cannibals)

A few days ago, our friend (Tiffany, who takes care of Dusty Sorbet and Hazel) came over after her farmers markets and we were all talking and she mentioned that she wanted to get more chickens. My mom offered for us to raise the chicks until school ends and two hours later we had to baby chickens sitting in our garage. We had all the previous supplies from raising the first batch of chickens so we were ready for these ones.

Currently there are only two chicks, named Hestia and Oreo (My brothers chose the names) but on thursday we get two more and me and my sister get to name them. The new ones are going to be Easter Eggers which make really colorful eggs!


Driving in Italy: BEWARE

If you plan to go to Italy consider re-taking drivers ed. In Italy, drivers really love to use their imaginations on the road. For example, on the Amalfi coast the only road to get to anywhere is about the width of an american one lane road. The Italian drivers like to imagine that it is a two lane road and they use it as such. I might be over exaggerating a little bit but driving in Italy was CRAZY!! Having a big car will probably result in scratchest but there were drivers with huge busses going down the tiny roads. Getting a smaller car will probably be very beneficial.

So the lesson here is: 1. Don’t drive, 2. Drive a small car or 3. Use your feet or take a train.

What to know about Pompeii, Herculaneum and Climbing Mt.Vesuvius in Italy

Climbing Mt.Vesuvius

Climbing Mount Vesuvius in Italy is possibly worth it. It depends on how good of a driver you are,\, and how long you can hike. My mother is a fantastic driver, and I have attempted one of the 7 summits so the hiking was not going to be an issue. I still did not make it to the top! All due to a serious lack of information on the most widely used library: The Internet! This is why people say don’t trust the internet! Here is my recommendations:

  • Go early in the morning! There are so many benifits of this! You dotn have to hike in the heat, there are less crowds, and probably more parking!
  • The parking is FREE but it’s not actually free because the park service gave some guys a permit to charge people for parking. You also have to pay for a parking spot ahead of time Dont park at the very top of the road right before the entrance because it is for busses only.
  • Try to drive a small car because Italians like to pretend that one lane roads are two lane roads and they use them like two lane roads. Your car might get scratched FYI
  • You have to have pre-purchased a ticket online to get onto the trail. To get a ticket you have to go to this website:https: //www.parconazionaledelvesuvio.it/en/visit-the-park/the-paths/the-great-cono-2/ and buy a ticket for a times slot the day before. Each time slot only has 10 tickets available.
  • If you are not a bus and you park where everyone else parks, it is a very long walk up to the start of the trail. I would suggest having someone drive everyone in your party up to the entrance, drop everyone off and go back down and park. The person who drives everyone probably wont get to climb the mountain but if they do, they will have to climb almost double of what the other people climb.
  • The bus ride that is offered by the parking guys in vests is $15 per person and you have to already have a ticket for getting into the park. The bus ride may be worth the money for some people but I would recommend just walking or being dropped off.
  • The roads up are very windy and small and alot of busses go up them. Have the best driver of the group behind the wheel to avoid collisions.

Pompeii

Pompeii is mind blowing! Walking on a road that looks perfectly intact while knowing that it is 2000 years old is crazy! The intricacy of life in Pompeii and the Roman empire is very fascinating because we often think that everyone was not as smart back then but they were super smart! There was plumbing in pompeii! Not plumbing like ours today but they had lead pipes and running water in houses. I would 100% recommend having a guided tour, you learn so much more! The tour company we used was Askos, our guide was great and we learned so much! Some fun facts were that romans used urine to clean their clothes. They also had the coolest fountains. The fountains around the city were landmarks used as meeting places.

Herculaneum

Herculaneum is not well known, probably due to its size. Herculaneum was a port city resting closer to vesuvius than pompeii. Because it was closer to vesuvius it is much more preserved. There is wood from it’s time as well as many other artifacts. The sad part is that since it was buried under 50+ feet of ash for thousands of years people forgot about it and built towns on top of it. The small section that is visible today is really cool but it is a shame that a large portion of it remains buried under homes and roads. For pompeii you need a whole day and a tour guide. I would recommend going to pompeii first so you learn all about the life style and then go to herculaneum without a guide. It is small enough that it’s just better to wander around the city. It was rather quiet when we went so we usually were able to go into each building with just our group. There is a garden for reading and relaxing as well as caves demonstrating how they excavate buildings. I found Herculaneum more enjoyable because we got to run around the city “discovering” everything and use the information we learned in pompeii to deduce what the buildings were for.