practicals Flashcards

food tests, microscope calibration, onion slide, water potential, root permeability (beetroot), effect of temperature/pH on rate of enzymes, dissection of fish head, dissection of mammalian heart

1
Q

starch

A

iodine

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2
Q

reducing sugar (e.g. glucose/all monosaccharides)

A

benedicts

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3
Q

non-reducing sugar

A

hcl and benedicts

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4
Q

test for proteins

A

biuret

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5
Q

fats/lipids

A

ethanol and water

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6
Q

result of iodine test

A

colour change from orange to blue/black

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7
Q

result of reducing sugar test

A

colour change from blue to green to yellow to red/orange

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8
Q

result of non reducing test

A

colour change from blue to green to yellow to red/orange

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9
Q

result of biurets test

A

colour change from blue to lilac

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10
Q

result of emulsion test (ethanol test)

A

white emulsion formed

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11
Q

procedure of non-reducing sugar test

A

add hcl, place in water bath 90 degrees, add sodium hydrogencarbonate then benedicts

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12
Q

food test for reducing sugars

A

add benedicts and place in water bath 90 degrees

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13
Q

procedure of emulsion

A

add ethanol, shake, add water, shake

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14
Q

what’s the equation for magnification

A

magnification = image size / actual size

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15
Q

how do you calculate the actual size of something (calibration of microscope)

A
  • convert stage micrometre units to nm
  • convert EPU to SMU
  • find out 1 EPU and convert to micrometers (mm–>micrometre = x1000)
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16
Q

what is the hazard, risk and control measure in the microscope calibration practical

A

hazard: the microscope slide and coverslip are sharp is broken
risk: cuts to skin
control measure: care when using, if breakage occurs, sweep up and dispose of broken glass carefully

17
Q

explain how you would do the onion slide practical

A
  • place water droplets on the slide
  • take one epidermal layer of onion (using forceps)
  • lay it flat on the surface of the slide
  • add 3 drops of iodine
  • add cover slip and lower it gently using a mounted needle (no air bubbles)
    (can also dab with a paper towel)
  • then place under the microscope
    (calculate actual size of a cell)
18
Q

give 3 hazards, risks and control measures for the onion slide practical

A
  1. iodine solution is an irritant, risk is contact with eyes/skin, control measure is flood with tap water if gets in contact
  2. microscope slide and cover slip are sharp if broken, risk is cuts to skin, control measure is care when using so not to break
  3. scalpel, risk is cuts to skin, control measure is cutting downwards and away from body
19
Q

how do you do the water potential practical (potatoes)

A
  1. prepare potato cylinders with same length
  2. dry each potato cylinder
  3. record starting mass of each potato cylinder
  4. fill tubes with different concentrations (add potato cylinder to each tube) and leave for a certain amount of time
  5. remove cylinders and dry
  6. record final mass and calculate % change in mass = change in mass/original mass x100
20
Q

whats the conclusion of the potato water potential practical

A

the more concentrated the sucrose solution, the more negative the mean % change in mass is

21
Q

how to do beetroot permeability practical

A
  1. prepare beetroot cylinders
  2. rinse to wash away pigment leakage
  3. dry
  4. prepare boiling tubes with distilled water
  5. label each tube with different temperatures
  6. place a beetroot cylinder into every tube, wait 15 mins then remove
  7. place in colorimeter
  8. plot a graph of mean % absorbance against temperature
22
Q

how to do the effect of temperature/pH on enzyme activity practical

A
  1. place beaker of lipase solution in 25 degrees
  2. place milk into a test tube and add drops of phenolthalein and sodium carbonate
  3. place the test tube in 25 degrees for 10 mins then add lipase and start a timer
  4. repeat for different temperatures