Fetal Pig Dissection—Part I
Fetal Pig Dissection—Part I
Taxonomy
Kingdom - ____________________
Phylum - Chordata
Class - _______________________
Order - Artiodactyla
Genus - ______________________
Species - _____________________
Materials Needed
∑ Dissecting tray, dissecting instruments, gloves, 4 pins
∑ One pig per 2-3 partners
∑ Purple lab book with fetal pig on cover - Photo Manual and Dissection Guide of the Fetal Pig
∑ Two strings per lab group
Introduction:
Fetal pigs are unborn animals. They are byproducts of the pork industry. This means that when pregnant sows (mature female swine) are killed for meat, the unborn babies are either removed for biological study (specimens in biology classes), or they are discarded and ground up as fertilizer. There are as many as 7-12 young in a single litter.
Which option would you prefer?
Fetal pigs are mammals, which are backboned animals, also known as ____________________________________.
Two chief mammalian characteristics that set them apart from the other class of vertebrates are:
1. Skin covered with or
2.
Telling the Age
1. The age of the fetal pig can be estimated by measuring the body length from the tip of the snout to the attachment of the tail (not including tail). Compare this length to the data given on relative sizes of a fetal pig at different times during gestation.
|Centimeters |Millimeters |Approximate |
|(Length of |(Length of |age of |
|fetus) |fetus) |Fetus (days) |
|1.1 | |21 |
| |17 |35 |
|2.8 | |49 |
|4.0 | |56 |
| |220 |100 |
| |300 |112-115 |
| | |(full term) |
*What type of external symmetry does a fetal pig have?
*What type of internal symmetry does a fetal pig have?
∑ What is the length of your fetal pig (in centimeters)?
∑ What is the approximate age of your fetal pig?
Identify External Anatomy:
___Anterior ______Posterior _____ Dorsal Ventral
Head (cranial) region
Neck (cervical) region
Trunk region/Abdomen
___Thoracic ___Lumbar ____Sacral
___Tail (caudal) region
How to Identify Males/Females:
Males:
∑ Prominent urogenital
opening under umbilical cord
∑ Scrotal sac (swelling)
∑ May feel penis under skin between urogenital
opening and scrotal sac (penis is internal)
Females
∑ Urogenital papilla (small, fleshy cone-shaped projection)
near anus and tail
∑ LACK OF scrotal sac swellings
∑ Tail usually curly/curlier than males
Important ! ! !
If you have a female pig, examine a male pig from another group to see the differences.
If you have a male pig, examine a female pig from another group to see the differences.
*What sex is your fetal pig? _____________________
Now that you know the sex of your fetal pig, you can name her/him.
∑ Name of your fetal pig ____________________
Tying and Cutting the Fetal Pig
1. Tie the fetal pig down to dissecting tray using two strings—one string for the arms, the other string for the legs.
DO NOT TIE STRING IN KNOTS—MAKE IT ADJUSTABLE!!!
1. Make an incision at the hairy papilla/chin with your scalpel and continue to the umbilical cord. Cut around umbilical cord on both sides.
Females: Direct two cuts around umbilical cord into one line and continue cutting between legs
Males: Direct two cuts around the umbilical cord, but continue two incisions separately and keep them apart between legs
Cutting Through the Body Wall
1. Carefully make incisions deeper, but be very careful not to cut into internal organs beneath skin.
2. Cut the edges of the diaphragm (flap of tissue covering liver) from the body wall.
3. Make lateral flaps:
∑ Cut caudal to (behind/beneath) the forelimbs; cut away from center of body
∑ Cut anterior to (in front of/above) hind limbs; cut away from center of body
∑ Pin lateral flaps to dissecting tray.
4. Next, find umbilical vein (leads from umbilical cord into liver) and cut it. Pull strip of flesh back.
5. Snip the very end off of the umbilical cord and observe the two umbilical arteries (injected with red latex dye) and the umbilical vein (injected with blue latex dye) inside.
Fetal Pig Dissection - Part II
Materials Needed
∑ Dissecting tray, dissecting instruments, gloves, pins
∑ One pig per three-four partners
∑ Purple lab book with fetal pig on cover—Photo Manual and Dissection Guide of the Fetal Pig
∑ The Concise Fetal Pig picture guide
∑ Two strings per lab group (use the same strings you used for Part I)
Digestive System
1. Do fetal pigs have a gastrovascular cavity or a digestive tract?
2. Is the digestive system a one-way (food travels in and waste travels out different openings) or a two-way system (food travels in and waste travels out the same opening)?
3. What is/are the opening (s) in the fetal pig?
Identify the Parts of the Digestive Tract
___ Mouth
___ Hard Palate
___ Soft Palate
___ Tongue
___ Papillae
___ Esophagus (smooth tube that carries food from the mouth to the stomach; not ribbed)
___ Stomach
___ Pyloric Sphincter (ring of muscle that regulates the release of partially digested food into the duodenum); in between
stomach and small intestine.
___ Small Intestine (duodenum, jejunum, ileum)
___ Mesentery (holds small intestine to body wall; clear with blood vessels running through it)
___ Caecum (small sac between the part of the small intestine, called the ileum, and large intestine)
___ Large Intestine (also known as colon)
___ Rectum (thick tube that lies on the body wall; in between the large intestine and the anus)
___ Anus
______ STICKER!
___ Liver
___ Gall Bladder (sac-like structure embedded within the right lobe of the liver; must look at
underside of liver to find)
___ Cystic Duct(transports bile stored in the gall bladder)
___ Hepatic Duct( comes from the liver; transports bile made in the liver to the small intestine)
___ Common Bile Duct (this duct forms when the cystic duct and the hepatic duct combine together
into one; this duct goes into the duodenum - the first part of the small intestine)
___ Pancreas (looks spongy like cauliflower; look underneath the stomach to find)
______STICKER!
Identify the Parts of the Abdominal Cavity NOT in the Digestive Tract
___ Peritoneal cavity (abdominal cavity)
___ Diaphragm (dome-shaped muscular wall that separates the thoracic cavity from the abdominal cavity)
___ Peritoneum (thin, clear tissue that covers the organs and holds them in place)
___ Spleen (long, thin organ)
___ Greater Omentum (thin, clear tissue that holds the spleen to the bottom of the stomach)
___ Kidney
______ STICKER!
Fetal Pig Dissection - Part III
Materials Needed
∑ Dissecting tray, dissecting instruments, gloves, pins
∑ One pig per three-four partners
∑ Purple lab book with fetal pig on cover - Photo Manual and Dissection Guide of the Fetal Pig
∑ The Concise Fetal Pig picture guide
∑ Two strings per lab group (use the same strings you used for Part I & II)
∑ Straw
Procedure
1. Before identifying organs of the Thoracic Cavity that are part of the Respiratory System, watch the “Respiratory System” part of the Boreal Laboratories Fetal Pig Dissection video.
Identify the parts of the Respiratory System
___ Diaphragm
___ Glottis
___ Epiglottis
___ Larynx
___ Trachea
___ Lungs (4 lobes on right, 3 lobes on left)
______ STICKER!
***Using a straw, try to blow and inflate the lungs!
Place the straw over the glottis/epiglottis and blow. It will be difficult to do, since the fetal pig has never taken a breath of air. They are very dense, because the fetal pig has only breathed water in the womb.
Identify Glands in the Thoracic Cavity that are NOT part of the Respiratory System
___ Thyroid Gland
___ Thymus Gland
______ STICKER!
[pic]
Fetal Pig Dissection - Part IV
Materials Needed
∑ Dissecting tray, dissecting instruments, gloves, pins
∑ One pig per three-four partners
∑ Purple lab book with fetal pig on cover—Photo Manual and Dissection Guide of the Fetal Pig
∑ The Concise Fetal Pig picture guide
∑ Two strings per lab group (use the same strings you used for Part I & II)
∑ Straw
Procedure
1. Before identifying organs of the Thoracic Cavity that are part of the Respiratory System, watch the "Respiratory System" part of the Boreal Laboratories Fetal Pig Dissection video.
Identify the parts of the Circulatory System
___Heart
___ Right Atrium
___ Left Atrium
___ Right Ventricle
___ Left Ventricle
___ Coronary Vessels (include both coronary artery and coronary vein—usually can't tell the difference)
___ Apex (tip of heart; point)
___Pulmonary Artery
___Ductus Arteriosis (short duct only in fetal animals that connects the pulmonary artery to the aorta)
___ Aortic Arch (curves/arches)
___ Aorta (continues from curve/arch and runs along the back of the fetal pig)
___ Umbilical Arteries
___ Umbilical Vein
∑ Is the circulatory system of a fetal pig an open or closed circulatory system? Why?
______ STICKER!
Identify the parts of the Urinary System.
Kidneys
Peritoneum
Ureters
Urinary Bladder
____ Urethra
______ STICKER!
ANTERIOR ARTERIES
[pic]
FEMALE UROGENITAL SYSTEM
Fetal Pig Dissection - Part V
Materials Needed
∑ Dissecting tray, dissecting instruments, gloves, pins
∑ One pig per three-four partners
∑ Purple lab book with fetal pig on cover—Photo Manual and Dissection Guide of the Fetal Pig
∑ The Concise Fetal Pig picture guide
∑ Two strings per lab group (use the same strings you used for Part I, II, III, & IV)
Procedure
1. Before identifying parts of the Central Nervous System, watch the "Central Nervous System" part of the Boreal
Laboratories Fetal Pig Dissection video.
1. Directions for exposing brain and spinal cord:
a) With a scalpel, make an incision around the upper part of the cranium. Extend the incision along both sides of the spinal
cord to the tail.
b) Next, deepen that incision using scissors.
c) Peel back and remove the skin with the fingers.
d) Use scissors to cut along the exposed portion of the skull. Use forceps to lift and remove the cartilaginous part of the
skull.
e) If the meninges (membranes that cover the brain) do not peel off with the skin, remove them by cutting between the
cerebral hemispheres.
a) To see the spinal cord, you may have to cut through vertebrae covering the spinal cord. This can be difficult to do!
Identify the parts of the Central Nervous System.
Meninges
Cerebrum
Longitudinal Cerebral Fissure
Sulci
Gyri
Cerebellum
Medulla Oblongata
Spinal Cord
_____ Spinal Nerves
_________ STICKER!
Congratulations!
YOU ARE OFFICIALLY DONE DISSECTING THE FETAL PIG!!!!!!!
-----------------------
cervical
___Snout
___External nares (nostrils)
___Umbilical cord
___Pinnae (external ears)
___Eyes
___Nictitating membrane (cover eyes) ___Mouth
___Tongue
___Umbilical cord
___Mammary papillae (teats/nipples)
___Anus
Forelimb/Forearm
___4 digits
___Wrist
___Elbow
___Shoulder
Hindlimb
___4 digits
___Ankle
___Knee
___Hip/Thigh
_____ STICKER!
Neck
Head region region Trunk region Tail region
Tongue
Knee
Appendages
Foot
Digit Toes
Hind limb
Ankle
Tail
Thigh
Hip
Umbilical cord
Umbilical
arteries
Umbilical vein
Elbow
Shoulder
Forearm
Upper arm
Wrist
Forelimb
Eye
External Nares
Eyelids
Sacral
Lumbar
Thorax
Ear (Pinnae)
Abdomen
Teats (nipples)
Umbilical cord
Urogential opening
Genital papilla
Scrotal sac
______Sticker!
Look at the picture!!
EPIGLOTTIS
OPENING TO GLOTTIS
SOFT PALATE
HARD PALATE
CANINE
INCISOR
FIGURE 4.2 Palate, tongue, and oropharynx of the fetal pig.
PAPILLAE
TONGUE
PAPILLAE
Cystic duct + Hepatic duct = common bile duct
THE ABDOMINAL CAVITY (CLOSE-UP)
Lobes of
VISCERAL ORGANS (CLOSE-UP)
THE THORACIC CAVITY
Left Carotid Artery
Right Jugular Vein
Subscapular Vein
Axillary Vein
Long Thoracic Artery
Cranial Vena Cava
Pulmonary Arch/artery
Right Atrium
Right Ventricle
Coronary Artery (Red)
Coronary Vein (Blue)
Left Ventricle
Left Atrium
Ductus Arteriosus
Systemic Aorta
Brachiocephalic Artery
Subclavian Artery
Axillary Artery
Internal Thoracic Artery
Thyrocervical
Urogenital Papilla
Tail
Right
Sulci
(grooves)
Gyri
(folds of tissue)
Longitudinal
Cerebral Fissure
Cerebellum
Medulla Oblongata
BRAIN (Dorsal View)
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