BIOLOGY - Center For Teaching &...
Transcript of BIOLOGY - Center For Teaching &...
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New Jersey Center for Teaching and Learning
Progressive Science Initiative
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BIOLOGY
Mitosis Lab
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Mitosis & Meiosis
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Students will observe the events of mitosis in plant and animal cells and will describe the similarities and differences in the process in the two types of cells. They will calculate the relative duration of the cell cycle stages.
Purpose
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Preserved slides of an onion root tip
Preserved slides of whitefish blastula
Compound Microscope
Materials
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Procedure A: Observing Mitosis in Plant and Animal Cells
Step 1 Obtain a microscope from the storage cabinet and place it on your lab table.
Step 2 Obtain a preserved slide of an onion root tip and one of a whitefish blastula.
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Step 3 Review your smartnotebook regarding the different phases of mitosis. You may want to use the sketches and the pictures below as a guide to help you identify the different stages.
Procedure A: Observing Mitosis in Plant and Animal Cells
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Step 4 Examine the onion root tip slide first under low power then switch to high power to study individual cells. Using your Smart Notebook and the pictures above, locate and sketch one cell in each phase of mitosis. Label each drawing with the phase, the type of organism (onion root tip or whitefish blastula), and the magnification. Repeat this with the slide of the whitefish blastula.
Procedure A: Observing Mitosis in Plant and Animal Cells
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Note: The length of the cell cycle for cells in actively dividing onion root tips is approximately 24 hours. You will determine how many cells are in each phase in your field of view. From this, you can infer the percentage of time each cell spends in each phase. This part of the lab is best done with a partner. One partner calls out the phases the cells are in and the other partner records them.
Step 1 Observe every cell in one high-power field of view and determine which phase of the cell cycle it is in. When you have observed and recorded all the cells in one field of view, you should switch places with your partner. Your partner will now observe cells in a second field of view and call them out to you and you will record them. You should count at least two full fields of view and at least 200 cells. If you have not counted at least 200 cells, count a third field of view. Record your data in Table 1.
Procedure B: Calculating Time for Cell Replication
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Step 2 Calculate the percentage of cells in each phase and record your results in Table 1. Let’s say that it takes, on average, 24 hours (1,440 minutes) for onion root tip cells to complete the cell cycle. Using this information, you can calculate the amount of time spent in each phase of the cell cycle from the percentage of cells in each phase. % of cells in stage x 1,440 minutes = minutes of cell cycle spent in stage.
Procedure B: Calculating Time for Cell Replication
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Data
Field 1
# of Cells
Field 2
# of Cells
Field 3
# of Cells
Total
# of Cells
Percent of Total Cells Counted
Time in Each Stage
Interphase
Prophase
Prometaphase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase
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Mitosis Lab Analysis
Grade:«grade»Subject:«subject»
Date:«date»
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1 Describe the main events that occur in each phase of mitosis. Students type their answers here
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2 What is happening in the cell during interphase?
Students type their answers here
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3 How does mitosis differ in plant and animal cells? Students type their answers here
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4 Based on your data in Table 1, what can you infer about the relative length of time an onion root tip cell spends in each stage of cell division? Students type their answers here
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