An Educator's Reference Desk Lesson Plan
Date: May 1994
Grade Level(s): 9, 10, 11, 12
Subject(s):
This activity is designed to let students see blood moving in the fin of a fish. They then can observe how the hormone epinephrine (adrenaline) changes the flow of blood.
PURPOSE:
A goldfish is wrapped in water soaked absorbent cotton and placed in a large petri dish. A glass slide is placed under and another over the caudal fin to hold the fin in place and help restrict the fish from flipping the fin from position. When positioned under a light microscope, the circulation of blood can easily be observed, as well as the movement of blood from arterioles to capillaries and to veinuoles. When epinephrine (adrenaline) solution is added topically to the fin, the response of the vessels can be observed.
OBJECTIVES: The student will be able to:
Familiarize yourself with the flow of blood to the fin by moving the petri dish around as you observe through the microscope (Remember, the microscope inverts images. Therefore, blood that appears to be flowing from the fin to the body is actually flowing from the body to the fin.)
Locate an arteriole, veinuole, and capillary in the fish fin. After finding each structure, turn to the medium powered lens and observe. After each observation answer the questions relative to the three structures:
Locate a position on the fish fin under the microscope where an arteriole and a capillary may both be observed at the same time (use low power). While one person observes the blood flow, an assistant should add two drops of epinephrine solution to the fish fin just cranial to where the fin is positioned under the microscope slide. The following questions should then be answered after returning your fish to a designated aquarium:
RESOURCES/MATERIALS NEEDED:
All described above.
TYING IT ALL TOGETHER:
When administering the epinephrine, the students will expect an increase in the fishes' blood flow based on their knowledge of adrenaline being a cardio-vascular stimulant. However, it restricts blood flow to the peripheral circulatory network. Their observations serve as a good test for their ability to separate what they bring in the lab as a
preconceived expectation from the actual observed effect. You might follow this lab with a discussion of the need for a placebo or other controls when doing labs of this nature.
Other drugs such as ethanol or nicotine may be used by some groups and the results compared on the board after the lab.
May 1994
These lesson plans are the result of the work of the teachers who have attended the Columbia Education Center's Summer Workshop. CEC is a consortium of teacher from 14 western states dedicated to improving the quality of education in the rural, western, United States, and particularly the quality of math and science Education. CEC uses Big Sky Telegraph as the hub of their telecommunications network that allows the participating teachers to stay in contact with their trainers and peers that they have met at the Workshops.