1
answer
0
watching
176
views
18 Oct 2018
1. Build a dichotomous key to all the tissues you have seen in the lab. For this, you can use any of their morphological characteristics (under the microscope) but not their physiological functions.
Tissues seen in the lab:
Epithelia: simple squamous, simple cuboidal, simple columnar, pseudostratified columnar, stratified squamous, stratified cuboidal and columnar, transitional, Globet cells.
Connective: adipose, areolar, hyaline cartilage, fibrocartilage, fibrocartilage, elastic cartilage, bone, blood
Muscle: smooth, muscle, cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle
Nervous: neuron cells, glial cells
1. Build a dichotomous key to all the tissues you have seen in the lab. For this, you can use any of their morphological characteristics (under the microscope) but not their physiological functions.
Tissues seen in the lab:
Epithelia: simple squamous, simple cuboidal, simple columnar, pseudostratified columnar, stratified squamous, stratified cuboidal and columnar, transitional, Globet cells.
Connective: adipose, areolar, hyaline cartilage, fibrocartilage, fibrocartilage, elastic cartilage, bone, blood
Muscle: smooth, muscle, cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle
Nervous: neuron cells, glial cells
Tod ThielLv2
18 Oct 2018