LAB
Chicken Leg
Dissection
Procedure:
1.
Put on gloves and collect your tools.
2.
Thoroughly rinse and dry one chicken leg. Place
it in the dissecting tray.
3.
Examine the outside skin tissue. This is the
epidermis and the dimples are where feathers emerged. Using scissors and forceps.
4.
Cut the skin and peel it away from the muscle.
5.
Notice the clear connective tissue that holds
the skin to the muscles. As you peel off the skin, you may need to cut away
some of this connective tissue. Work slowly and carefully with scissors and
forceps until all skin is removed.
6.
Describe how the connective tissue looks and
feels. What type of connective tissue is this? It looks clear but feels really
strong. This epithelial tissue.
7.
Observe, with your naked eye bundles of muscle
tissue surrounding the bones. Separate the bundles of muscles by separating
them out with your fingers. Begin by inserting your thumb into the muscle of
the lower leg. You will need to push forcefully through the shiny lining
(called fascia) over the muscle, but it will give way at the natural
separations between the muscle bundles. Continue separating the muscle into
bundles by forcing your thumb and fingers through the muscle until you are able
to distinguish several separate bundles.
a.
Describe the arrangement of the muscle
bundles. The muscle bundles were arranged layered closely together, I noticed 4
large ones and possibly one small one.
8.
The strong, shiny, white cords, called tendons,
hold the muscle to the bones. Some of these tendons will pull away from the
bone as you separate the muscle bundles. Use a probe, if needed, to find the
tendons of the chicken leg. Using the dissection scissors, cut across the
tendons at Line A (Figure 1). Observe the numerous tendons and pull the freed
muscles down and away from the bone, as if you were peeling a banana. Careful
you don't cut any ligaments that attach bone to bone. Look closely at the
ligaments.
Examine the two bones in the lower leg. The
large bone (Bone A) is the tibia. The small, toothpick-like bone (Bone B) is
the fibula.
a.
What sort of connective tissue are tendons
composed of? Fibrous connective tissue
9.
Remove a single muscle by cutting the tendons
and peeling the muscle away from the bone.
a.
What sort of muscle tissue is represented?
How do you know? Skeletal muscle, it appeared to be connected to the bone
b.
Nerves are generally thin, threadlike white
strands found between the muscle and the
nearest bone. Look for the nerve in your specimen. Did you find them?
__no__
c.
What is the physical difference in the
tendon of the insertion when compared to the origin? The only difference that I
noticed was that the insertion appeared to be longer and thinner than the
origin
10.
Remove all remaining muscle to expose the bones
of the chicken leg.
a.
What is the soft material inside a bone? Bone
marrow
b.
Name three specific types of cells present
here. Do not break the bone; it is sharp! Osteoblasts, osteocytes, and osteoclasts
c.
Name three functions of bone. support,
protection, and movement
11.
Cut onto the hinge joint by cutting into the top
of the covering of the joint from the femur side. It will become apparent that
you must remove the knee cap area to expose the menisci and ligaments within.
Pull up on the knee cap area and cut through it with the scissors. You will
have cut through the bursa, a sac that acts as a shock absorber for the knee
joint. These are found in every joint.
12.
Pull the covering back and look into the inside
of the joint. You will see more white bands of ligaments holding the bones
together. Observe the shiny, white layer covering the ends of the bones is
cartilage. It helps the bones slide smoothly when the leg bends.
13.
Bend the specimen at Joint B (Figure 1) and
rotate the femur in all directions. Remove the muscle that covers Joint B by
cutting parallel to the femur, upward toward the backbone. Remove pink muscle
tissue until you see a shiny white sheet of ligament that covers the joint.
Present is an exterior ligament that holds the femur in the hip socket
a.
What type of connective tissue composes the
ligaments? dense connective tissue
Figure 2 is provided in a separate document.
b.
Label Figure 2 with the names of the joints
you observed and the motion they make.
c.
On Figure 2, sketch one muscle origin (the name
of the bone indicates the insertion) and one muscle insertion you can see in
the leg.
14.
Dispose of materials as directed. Make sure to wash your hands, tools, and work
station with plenty of soap and water.
This is very nice! I hope you had some fun with this!
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