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Full lab report contents for Biochemistry, Genetics, Ecology, Maintenance & Repair, and Glass Blowing — from Mysterious Rey's report. Expand each experiment, read, print, or download.
Laboratory practicals by Mysterious Rey, Professor of SLT.
Tests for Sugars
To perform qualitative tests for the identification of sugars (carbohydrates) using various chemical reagents.
- Test tubes and test tube rack, test tube holder, Bunsen burner / boiling water bath
- Dropping pipette, measuring cylinder, distilled water
- 1% alcohol alpha-naphthol solution, Concentrated H₂SO₄
- Fehling's solution A and B, Barfoed's reagent
- Concentrated NaOH, Concentrated HCl, NaCl solution
- Benedict's qualitative reagent, Seliwanoff's reagent (Resorcinol-HCl)
- Urea and SnCl₂ in 4% H₂SO₄, Sugar solutions (glucose, fructose)
i. Molisch's Test: Three drops of 1% alcohol alpha-naphthol were added to 1ml of sugar solution and mixed. 1ml of concentrated H₂SO₄ was carefully poured down the side of the test tube to form a lower layer. The test tube was observed for colour change at the junction.
ii. Fehling's Test: 1ml each of Fehling's A and B were added to 1ml of sugar solution and diluted to 10ml. 2ml of the mixture were boiled for one minute. Where blue colour persisted, sugar was added drop by drop with intermittent boiling. The test was repeated with fructose in the cold.
iii. Barfoed's Test: Ten drops of sugar solution were added to 2ml of Barfoed's reagent and heated in boiling water bath for 10 minutes. Repeated using glucose with drops of HCl, NaOH and NaCl respectively.
iv. Action of Alkali on Sugar: Two drops of concentrated NaOH were boiled with 1ml of glucose for one minute. Cooled, neutralized with HCl and Benedict's test was performed.
v. Seliwanoff's Reaction: A few drops of fructose were added to 3ml of resorcinol-HCl reagent and boiled for half a minute. Colour noted after 10 minutes.
vi. Foulger's Test: A few drops of fructose were added to 3ml of urea and SnCl₂ in 4% H₂SO₄. Boiled for one minute and colour noted after 10 minutes.
| Test | Reagent Used | Observation |
|---|---|---|
| Molisch's Test | Alpha-naphthol + conc. H₂SO₄ | Purple/violet ring at junction of layers |
| Fehling's Test | Fehling's A + B | Brick-red precipitate; fructose positive in cold |
| Barfoed's Test | Barfoed's reagent | Reddish precipitate of copper(II) oxide |
| Alkali on Sugar | NaOH + Benedict's | Colour change to brick-red |
| Seliwanoff's Test | Resorcinol-HCl reagent | Deep cherry red colour after 10 minutes |
| Foulger's Test | Urea + SnCl₂ in H₂SO₄ | Red or pink colour after 10 minutes |
The various chemical tests confirmed the presence and identity of sugars. Molisch's test is a general test for all carbohydrates producing a purple ring. Fehling's and Barfoed's tests detect reducing sugars. Seliwanoff's and Foulger's tests are specific for fructose producing characteristic red colours.
Further Tests for Sugars
To perform further qualitative tests for the identification of pentoses and other sugars, and to detect sucrose in the presence of reducing sugars.
- Test tubes, rack, holder, Bunsen burner, boiling water bath, microscope
- Arabinose solution, Concentrated HCl, Bial's reagent
- Glacial acetic acid, Aniline, Reducing sugar solution
- Phenylhydrazine-sodium acetate reagent, Fructose solution, Sucrose solution
- Fehling's solution A and B, 40% NaOH solution
i. Bial's Test: 1ml of arabinose was added to 3ml of concentrated HCl and 0.5ml of Bial's reagent. Heated until boiling and colour noted on cooling.
ii. Aniline Reaction: 1ml glacial acetic acid added to 1ml arabinose and 5 drops aniline. Heated to boiling, stood 3 minutes and colour noted.
iii. Phenyl-Osazone Formation: 2ml reducing sugar mixed with 2ml phenylhydrazine-sodium acetate reagent in boiling water bath for 30 minutes. Cooled, supernatant decanted and crystals examined under microscope.
iv. Detection of Sucrose: 1ml fructose added to 1ml sucrose. Fehling's A and B added and boiled. Filtered, acidified with HCl, boiled 2 minutes. Cooled, NaOH added to make alkaline and boiled again.
| Test | Observation |
|---|---|
| Bial's Test | Green or blue-green colour developed on cooling, indicating pentose sugar |
| Aniline Reaction | Red or pink colour developed after standing, confirming pentose |
| Phenyl-Osazone Formation | Yellow needle-shaped crystals in broom-like pattern under microscope |
| Detection of Sucrose | Brick-red precipitate after hydrolysis and alkaline treatment confirmed sucrose |
Bial's test and the aniline reaction confirmed pentose sugar in arabinose by producing characteristic colour changes. Phenylosazone formation produced yellow crystals confirming reducing sugars. Sucrose was detected by removing reducing sugar with Fehling's test then hydrolyzing sucrose with acid. Results confirmed sucrose is a non-reducing sugar that yields reducing sugars upon hydrolysis.
Tests on Disaccharides and Polysaccharides
To perform qualitative tests for the identification and hydrolysis of disaccharides and polysaccharides.
- Maltose solution, Sucrose solution, Starch solution, Glycogen solution, Gum solution
- Dilute HCl, 40% NaOH, Dilute iodine solution, Dilute NaOH
- Ammonium sulphate (NH₄)₂SO₄, Cotton wool, Cold 50% H₂SO₄
- Fehling's solution A and B, Distilled water
a) 4ml each of maltose and sucrose were added to 1ml dilute HCl and heated in boiling water bath for 30 minutes. Cooled, 2 drops 40% NaOH added. Tests for fructose and glucose carried out.
b) One drop iodine added to starch, glycogen and gum solutions. Control tube set up. Colour changes tabulated. Heated, cooled and observed. NaOH then HCl added.
c) Solid polysaccharide stirred with cold and hot water separately. Filtered and filtrates tested with iodine.
a) 5ml starch mixed with 1ml dilute HCl and heated. One drop removed every 2 minutes onto white tile with fresh iodine. Time to achromatic point noted.
b) Polysaccharide solutions half saturated then fully saturated with ammonium sulphate. Precipitate formation noted.
c) Cotton wool dissolved in cold 50% H₂SO₄ and tested for sugar with Fehling's test.
d) Filter paper treated with cold 50% H₂SO₄, 2ml water added, hydrolyzed on water bath 30 minutes. Tested for glucose.
| Test | Observation |
|---|---|
| Hydrolysis of maltose | Brick-red precipitate confirmed glucose |
| Hydrolysis of sucrose | Brick-red precipitate confirmed glucose and fructose |
| Iodine on starch | Blue-black colour; disappeared on heating, returned on cooling |
| Iodine on glycogen | Reddish-brown colour |
| Iodine on gum | No colour change |
| Solid polysaccharide cold water | Poor solubility; filtrate gave positive iodine test |
| Solid polysaccharide hot water | Better solubility; filtrate gave positive iodine test |
| Test | Observation |
|---|---|
| Starch hydrolysis on white tile | Blue-black faded progressively until achromatic point reached |
| Ammonium sulphate saturation | Precipitate formed on full saturation |
| Cotton wool in H₂SO₄ | Positive Fehling's test confirmed glucose |
| Filter paper hydrolysis | Positive Fehling's test confirmed glucose formed |
Maltose and sucrose were hydrolyzed by dilute HCl into monosaccharides confirmed by Fehling's test. Starch, glycogen and gum gave different colours with iodine showing structural differences. Cellulose did not react with iodine but yielded glucose after acid hydrolysis, confirming it is a glucose-based polysaccharide.
Estimation of Glucose by Benedict's Method
To standardize Benedict's reagent using a known glucose solution and to determine the glucose content of diabetic urine using Benedict's quantitative method.
- Burette and burette stand, pipette, conical flask, Bunsen burner, glass bead
- Benedict's quantitative reagent, 0.5% glucose solution
- Anhydrous sodium carbonate (2g), Diabetic urine sample
i. Standardization: 10ml of Benedict's reagent were measured into a conical flask with 2g anhydrous sodium carbonate and a glass bead. Brought to boiling. 0.5% glucose solution was run slowly from a burette until the blue colour was completely discharged. Mean of 3 titrations taken.
ii. Test with Diabetic Urine: A rough titration was first performed with undiluted urine. Urine was diluted so approximately equal volumes of urine and reagent were used. Mean of 3 titrations recorded and expressed as mg glucose per 100ml urine.
| Titration | 0.5% Glucose Used (ml) |
|---|---|
| 1st | 5.20 |
| 2nd | 5.00 |
| 3rd | 5.00 |
| Mean | 5.07 |
| Titration | Diluted Urine Used (ml) |
|---|---|
| 1st | 4.20 |
| 2nd | 4.00 |
| 3rd | 4.00 |
| Mean | 4.07 |
Benedict's reagent was successfully standardized giving a glucose equivalent of 25.35mg per 10ml. The glucose content of diabetic urine was estimated at 623mg per 100ml, significantly above normal range. This confirms glucosuria associated with diabetes mellitus.
Tests on Proteins and Amino Acids
To perform qualitative tests for the identification of proteins and amino acids using specific chemical reagents.
- Standard amino acid solutions, Protein test solutions (milk and egg)
- Dilute copper sulphate solution, 40% NaOH solution, 4% sodium hydroxide solution
- Concentrated nitric acid, Millon's reagent, 5% lead acetate solution
i. Biuret Test: 1ml of each test solution placed in separate test tubes. One drop dilute copper sulphate and 1ml 40% NaOH added. Colours noted and compared with water blank.
ii. Xanthoproteic Reaction: 1ml of each test solution boiled with 1ml concentrated nitric acid. Precipitates and colours recorded.
iii. Millon's Test: Two drops Millon's reagent added to 2ml test solution and boiled. Colour and precipitate noted.
iv. Sulphur Test: 1ml test solution boiled with 3ml 4% NaOH. After cooling, 3 drops 5% lead acetate added and results noted.
| Test | Observation | Inference |
|---|---|---|
| Biuret Test | Purple or violet colour formed | Presence of CO-NH groups confirming protein |
| Xanthoproteic Reaction | Yellow precipitate turning orange with alkali | Aromatic amino acids present |
| Millon's Test | Red or pink colour and precipitate | Hydroxyl group on benzene ring, tyrosine confirmed |
| Sulphur Test | Dark brown/black lead sulphide precipitate | Sulphur containing amino acids present |
The Biuret test confirmed proteins through purple colour indicating peptide bonds. Xanthoproteic reaction confirmed aromatic amino acids. Millon's test was positive for tyrosine and phenolic compounds. The sulphur test confirmed sulphur containing amino acids through dark lead sulphide precipitate formation.
Further Tests on Proteins and Amino Acids
To perform further qualitative tests for the identification of specific amino acids using chemical reagents.
- Protein and amino acid test solutions, Concentrated H₂SO₄
- Dilute commercial formalin (1:3000), 40% sodium hydroxide solution
- Naphthol solution, 5% sodium hypobromite solution, Ninhydrin reagent
i. Formaldehyde Test: 1.5ml of dilute formalin (1:3000) and 1ml test solution placed in test tube. 2ml concentrated H₂SO₄ carefully poured down the side to form lower layer. Interface observed for colour change.
ii. Sakaguchi Reaction: 2ml test solution made alkaline with one drop 40% NaOH. One drop naphthol and 2 drops 5% sodium hypobromite added. Colour noted.
iii. Ninhydrin Reaction: Different protein and amino acid solutions spotted onto filter paper. One drop ninhydrin added to each spot. Paper held over Bunsen flame to dry and colours noted.
| Test | Observation | Inference |
|---|---|---|
| Formaldehyde Test | Bluish purple colour at interface | Positive for indole derivatives such as tryptophan |
| Sakaguchi Reaction | Red colour developed | Presence of arginine confirmed |
| Ninhydrin Reaction | Purple/blue-purple; yellow for proline | Amino acids and proteins confirmed |
The formaldehyde test gave a positive result for tryptophan and indole derivatives. The Sakaguchi reaction confirmed arginine through characteristic red colour. The ninhydrin reaction confirmed amino acids and proteins producing purple on most amino acids and yellow on proline.
Identification of Proteins
To identify and separate different types of proteins from a test solution using chemical precipitation and specific protein tests.
- Test solution, Dilute acetic acid, Bench sodium hydroxide, Dilute sodium hydroxide
- Concentrated nitric acid, Ammonium molybdate solution, Solid ammonium sulphate
- Millon's reagent, Dilute copper sulphate solution, 40% NaOH solution
a) 5ml of test solution placed in test tube and dilute acetic acid added drop by drop. Precipitate formed was completely extracted by filtration.
b) Precipitate re-dissolved in 1ml hot bench NaOH. 2ml concentrated nitric acid and 1ml ammonium molybdate added and boiled 5 minutes. Yellow precipitate on standing noted.
c) Filtrate from (a) made slightly alkaline with 1 or 2 drops dilute NaOH. Boiled and filtered. Precipitate noted.
d) Hot filtrate from (c) saturated with solid ammonium sulphate and filtered. Precipitate tested with Millon's and Biuret tests.
e) Biuret test performed on filtrate from (d) and result noted.
| Step | Observation | Inference |
|---|---|---|
| a) Acetic acid addition | White precipitate formed | Acid precipitable proteins present |
| b) Nitric acid + ammonium molybdate | Yellow precipitate on standing | Cascinogens confirmed |
| c) Alkaline filtrate boiled | Precipitate formed | Albumin and globulin precipitated |
| d) Ammonium sulphate saturation | Millon positive (red); Biuret positive (purple) | Gelatin and proteose identified |
| e) Biuret on final filtrate | Purple colour formed | Peptone confirmed |
Different protein fractions were successfully separated and identified. Cascinogens were confirmed by yellow precipitate with ammonium molybdate. Albumin and globulin were precipitated under alkaline conditions. Gelatin and proteose were distinguished using Millon's and Biuret tests. Peptone was confirmed by positive Biuret test in the final filtrate.
Laboratory practicals by Mysterious Rey, Professor of SLT.
Identification of Nucleus in a Cell
To show the organelle in which the chromosomes (and genes) reside.
- Medium size onion bulb, New razor blade, Water in small plastic water bottle
- 2 microscope slides with cover slips, Binocular microscope
- Stain/dye (iodine, Benedict solution or Fehling's solution)
The onion bulb was cut into two halves. One half was further cut into two quarters. A scaly leaf was removed from one quarter and bent backward until it broke. A small piece of epidermal layer was peeled and placed on a clean microscope slide with 1 to 2 drops of water. A cover slip was placed over it and viewed under X10 then X40 objective. The slide was removed, cover slip uncovered, 1 to 2 drops of stain added and cover slip replaced. Viewed again under X10 and X40 objectives.
Under low power (X10) onion epidermal cells appeared as elongated rectangular cells in regular pattern. Under high power (X40) cell wall, cytoplasm and nucleus were clearly visible. After staining the nucleus appeared more distinct and deeply stained.
The nucleus was successfully identified in onion epidermal cells after staining. The stain made the nucleus distinct under the microscope, confirming it is a definite organelle in plant cells where chromosomes and genes reside.
Functions of organelles:
- Cell wall: Provides structural support and shape to the plant cell
- Cell membrane: Controls movement of substances in and out of the cell
- Cytoplasm: Holds organelles and is site of many chemical reactions
- Nucleus: Controls all cell activities and contains genetic material (DNA)
- Vacuole: Stores water, salts and waste products, maintains cell turgidity
- Nuclear membrane: Encloses the nucleus and regulates movement of substances
Why is the nucleus the control centre? The nucleus contains DNA which carries all genetic information needed to direct all cell activities. It controls protein synthesis, cell growth, cell division and overall cell functioning. Without the nucleus the cell cannot carry out normal activities and will eventually die.
Mitotic Cell Division
To show the behaviour of chromosomes in the stages of mitosis.
- Onion bulb seedlings in water culture, Binocular microscope
- 2 microscope slides with cover slips, Stains/dyes (iodine solution, Fehling's solution)
- Water in small water bottle, Razor blade or scalpel, Blotting/tissue paper
Two to three root tips of 1 to 2mm were cut onto a clean microscope slide and 1 to 2 drops of water added. Root tips were gently macerated into a thin squash using the tip of a pen. One to two drops of stain were added and spread thinly and evenly. The slide was viewed under X10 then X40 objective. Oil immersion was used and the slide was observed under X100 objective.
Under low power (X10) root tip cells appeared small and densely packed. Under high power (X40) and X100 chromosomes were visible in various stages of mitosis. Different stages were observed including interphase, prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase.
Mitotic cell division was successfully observed in onion root tip cells. The chromosomes were visible after staining and various stages of mitosis were identified. Mitosis produces two daughter cells genetically identical to the parent cell.
Types of chromosomes based on centromere position:
- Metacentric: Centromere at the centre, producing two equal arms
- Submetacentric: Centromere slightly off centre, one short arm and one long arm
- Acrocentric: Centromere near one end, one very short and one very long arm
- Telocentric: Centromere at the tip, producing only one visible arm
Stages of mitotic cell division: Interphase (DNA replication) → Prophase (chromosomes condense) → Prometaphase (nuclear membrane disappears) → Metaphase (chromosomes align at equator) → Anaphase (sister chromatids pulled to poles) → Telophase (two nuclei form) → Cytokinesis (two genetically identical daughter cells).
Meiotic Cell Division
To show the behaviour of chromosomes during meiosis I and II.
- Prepared microscope slides of different stages of meiosis
- Binocular microscope, Prepared projector slides of meiosis stages
- Projector with screen, Power source
The microscope or projector was connected to the power source and operated. The prepared slides of different stages of meiosis were viewed studiously and short notes were made on each stage observed.
The various stages of meiosis I and meiosis II were observed on the prepared slides. In meiosis I, homologous chromosomes were seen pairing up and separating. In meiosis II, sister chromatids were observed separating. Four daughter cells were produced at the end of meiosis II each with half the chromosome number.
Meiotic cell division was successfully observed. The behaviour of chromosomes during meiosis I and II was distinct and identifiable at each stage. Meiosis produces four genetically different daughter cells each with half the chromosome number, important for sexual reproduction and genetic variation.
| Feature | Meiosis I | Meiosis II |
|---|---|---|
| Type of division | Reductional division | Equational division |
| Chromosomes involved | Homologous chromosomes separate | Sister chromatids separate |
| Crossing over | Occurs in prophase I | Does not occur |
| Cells produced | 2 haploid cells | 4 haploid cells |
| Chromosome number | Reduced by half | Remains same as after meiosis I |
| Similarity to mitosis | Not similar | Similar to mitosis |
Expression of Dominant Character
To identify the various degrees of dominance expression.
- Genetic corn, 4 beakers
- Access to experimental farm at Institute of Agricultural Research (IAR)
A field trip was made to an experimental farm grown with advance lines (pure breed) of maize or guinea corn or cassava. Uniformity and observable characteristics of the plants were noted. The genetic corn provided was shelled into a beaker. White grains were counted into one beaker and coloured grains into another. Counts were recorded accordingly.
| Grain Colour | Count |
|---|---|
| White grains | 232 |
| Coloured grains | 768 |
| Total | 1000 |
The expression of dominant characters was observed in the field plants and genetic corn. Pure breed plants showed uniformity due to homozygosity. The ratio of coloured to white grains approximated 3:1, confirming Mendel's law of segregation and expression of dominance in heterozygous crosses.
Ratio and genetics: White = 232, Coloured = 768, Total = 1000. Ratio = 3:1. This confirms a monohybrid cross (Cc × Cc). Coloured (C) is dominant over white (c). Genotypic ratio 1CC:2Cc:1cc. Confirms Mendel's Law of Segregation.
Organisms Used in Genetic Experiments
To identify the various characteristics that qualify an organism for use in genetic experiments.
Rotten fruits were cut into halves and exposed by the laboratory windows. Daily observations were made for Drosophila colonization. Individual Drosophila were observed with a hand or table lens and characters recorded. Moist corn cob stalks were exposed by the laboratory corridors until fully infested with Neurospora. The Neurospora culture was observed with the hand lens for distinguishing characteristics.
Drosophila colonized the rotten fruits within a few days showing observable differences in body colour, eye colour and wing size. Neurospora grew on moist corn cob stalks showing orange coloured spores, thread-like mycelium and distinct growth patterns.
Both Drosophila and Neurospora were successfully cultured and observed. Their contrasting features and short generation times make them suitable for genetic experiments, allowing easy observation of inherited traits within a short period.
Drosophila: Short generation time (~2 weeks), large number of offspring, only 4 pairs of chromosomes, males and females easily distinguished, many contrasting traits observable with hand lens, cheap and easy to culture.
Neurospora: Short generation time, exists as haploid making gene expression directly observable, produces ordered tetrads useful for gene mapping, easy and cheap to culture, shows clear contrasting traits.
Variation in Seedlings
To identify genetic variations in a natural population of plants.
Seeds collected from wild herbaceous plants were raised in a nursery bed or planting pots with 2 to 3 seedlings per pot. As seedlings grew they were observed for phenotypic variation. All variable characters observed were listed and recorded.
Phenotypic variations were observed among individuals raised from the same wild seed collection. Differences were noticed in plant height, leaf shape, leaf colour, stem thickness and rate of growth.
Genetic variation was successfully observed among seedlings raised from wild seeds. Variations in measurable and non-measurable characters confirm that wild plant populations contain wide genetic diversity resulting from random genetic recombination during sexual reproduction.
| Measurable (Metric) | Non-Measurable (Non-Metric) |
|---|---|
| Plant height | Leaf shape (broad or narrow) |
| Leaf length and width | Leaf colour (dark or light green) |
| Stem diameter | Presence or absence of leaf hairs |
| Number of leaves per plant | Leaf surface texture (smooth or rough) |
| Root length | Stem colour (green or reddish) |
Deviations from Mendelian Inheritance
To identify complete, partial and no dominance conditions in coat colour of mice.
- Black male mouse, White female mouse, Mouse cage, Mouse feed, Water, Mouse litter
A black male mouse and a white female mouse were kept together in a cage and fed daily. At maturity the mice mated and produced offspring. As the offspring grew their coat colours were noted and recorded.
The offspring showed variation in coat colour. Some had black coat resembling the male parent, some had white coat resembling the female parent, and some had grey coat showing a blend of both parents indicating partial dominance.
The coat colour distribution demonstrated the three conditions of dominance. Complete dominance was shown where offspring had purely black or white coat. Partial dominance was shown where offspring had grey coat. This confirms that inheritance does not always follow simple Mendelian patterns.
| Category | Number | Proportion |
|---|---|---|
| Resemble male parent (black) | 3 | 3/12 = 1/4 |
| Resemble female parent (white) | 3 | 3/12 = 1/4 |
| Share both parents (grey) | 6 | 6/12 = 1/2 |
| Total | 12 | 1 |
Laboratory practicals by Mysterious Rey, Professor of SLT.
Porosity and Water Holding Capacity of Three Soil Types
To compare the porosity and water retaining capacity of sandy, loamy and clay soils.
- Three measuring cylinders of 100cm³, Cotton wool, Three funnels, Water, Stop clock
- Dry sand, Dry clay, Dry loam
Loam and clay soils were ground into fine particles after drying in the sun. Equal masses of dry sand, clay and loam were placed separately into three funnels each blocked at the neck with cotton wool. The funnels were placed on top of three measuring cylinders. Equal amounts of water (60cm³) were poured into each funnel. The setup was allowed to remain for one hour and measurements were taken.
| Soil Type | Water Poured (cm³) | Water Drained (cm³) | Water Retained (cm³) | % Retained |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sandy soil | 60 | 50 | 10 | 16.7% |
| Loamy soil | 60 | 40 | 20 | 33.3% |
| Clay soil | 60 | 30 | 30 | 50.0% |
Sandy soil is most porous due to larger particles retaining the least water (16.7%). Clay soil is least porous retaining the most water (50%). Loamy soil is intermediate (33.3%). Loamy soil may retain more water than clay if it contains large quantities of organic matter.
Capillary Action of Soil Types
To compare and determine the capillary action of different soil types.
- Three long glass tubes, Cotton wool, Trough, Stop clock, Water
- Dry sand, Dry clay, Dry loam
One end of each glass tube was closed with cotton wool. Each tube was filled separately with ground clay, sandy and loamy soils. The tubes were immersed at the cotton wool end into a trough containing water. The setup was allowed to remain for 3 to 6 hours and the rise of water in each tube was observed and recorded.
| Soil Type | Early Stage Water Rise | Final Water Rise |
|---|---|---|
| Sandy soil | Fast | Low |
| Loamy soil | Moderate | High |
| Clay soil | Slow | Highest |
Clay and loamy soils have greater capillary action due to their tiny pore spaces which draw water higher through surface tension. Sandy soil has poor capillary action due to large pore spaces and large particle sizes.
Natural Habitat — Population Size of Ants
To determine the population size of ants in a habitat.
The measuring tape was used to determine the area of the whole plot. The quadrat (1m × 1m) was placed at shoulder level and thrown randomly into the area of study. The number of ants inside the quadrat was counted and recorded. The throw was repeated 10 times. The average number of ants per m² was calculated and the area of the plot was used to determine the population size.
| Throw No. | Ants Counted |
|---|---|
| 1 | 6 |
| 2 | 8 |
| 3 | 5 |
| 4 | 7 |
| 5 | 9 |
| 6 | 6 |
| 7 | 8 |
| 8 | 7 |
| 9 | 5 |
| 10 | 9 |
| Total | 70 |
| Average | 7 |
The quadrat method was successfully used to estimate the ant population at 3,500 ants. This method is useful for estimating populations of organisms that cannot be easily counted individually across a large area.
Population Size of Earthworms at Gamu Park Kaduna
To determine the population size of earthworms using earthworm casts.
A measuring tape was used to determine the area of the whole plot. The quadrat (1m × 1m) was placed at shoulder level and thrown randomly. The number of earthworm casts inside the quadrat was counted and recorded. The throw was repeated 10 times.
| Throw No. | Earthworm Casts |
|---|---|
| 1 | 5 |
| 2 | 7 |
| 3 | 4 |
| 4 | 6 |
| 5 | 8 |
| 6 | 5 |
| 7 | 7 |
| 8 | 6 |
| 9 | 4 |
| 10 | 8 |
| Total | 60 |
| Average | 6 |
The quadrat method was successfully used to estimate earthworm population at 3,000 earthworms. Earthworm casts are reliable indicators of earthworm presence and population density.
Why earthworm casts were used instead of earthworms directly: Earthworms live underground and are not visible on the surface. Digging to count them directly would destroy the habitat. Each cast on the surface reliably indicates an earthworm below. It is a faster, easier and non-destructive field method.
Percentage Cover of Tridax Species
To determine Tridax population size.
A tape rule was used to determine the area under study. The rope was marked at convenient intervals. One end was tied to a peg at one end of the study area. The rope was stretched across and tied to a second peg. The number of Tridax plants touching the rope within intervals was counted and recorded. The process was repeated 5 times.
| Transect Number | Tridax Plants Counted |
|---|---|
| 1 | 12 |
| 2 | 15 |
| 3 | 11 |
| 4 | 14 |
| 5 | 13 |
| Total | 65 |
| Average | 13 |
The line transect method was successfully used to estimate Tridax population and percentage cover. Repeating the transect 5 times gave a more accurate and reliable estimate of 6,500 plants.
Population of Locust on Farmland — Lincoln Index
To determine the population size of locust using the capture mark release recapture method (Lincoln Index).
- Sweep net, Marker or ink, Farmland, Tape rule
A tape rule was used to determine the farmland area. A sweep net was used to capture locusts. Captured locusts were marked with ink and released. After a period of time locusts were recaptured. The number of marked and unmarked locusts in the second capture was recorded and population size calculated using the Lincoln Index.
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| First capture and marked (M) | 40 |
| Second capture (n) | 35 |
| Recaptured marked locusts (m) | 14 |
The capture mark release recapture method was successfully used to estimate locust population at 100 locusts. This method is reliable for estimating populations of mobile organisms.
Stratification in a Forest — Afaka Aforestation Reserve
To examine and describe the stratification in a forest.
Students took a field trip to Afaka aforestation reserve at kilometre 30, Buruku. The forest stratification was observed. Plants and animals on each stratum were observed and recorded. The forest floor was also observed and recorded.
| Stratum | Height | Plants Observed | Animals Observed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emergent layer | Tallest trees above canopy | Iroko, mahogany | Eagles, hawks |
| Canopy layer | Continuous tree cover | Tall forest trees | Monkeys, birds |
| Understorey layer | Below canopy | Small trees, shrubs | Snakes, lizards |
| Shrub layer | Low growing plants | Ferns, seedlings | Insects, frogs |
| Forest floor | Ground level | Mosses, fungi, leaf litter | Earthworms, beetles, ants |
Afaka aforestation reserve showed clear forest stratification with distinct layers from emergent to forest floor. Each layer supported different plants and animals adapted to its light, temperature and humidity conditions.
Isolating Microbial Populations from Soil
To isolate microbial populations from soil.
- Plate count agar (PCA), Sabouraud agar, Starch-casein agar
- Cyclohexamide stock solution, 80°C water bath, 50°C water bath
- 1ml pipettes, 9ml dilution blanks, Sterile saline (99ml), Soil sample
Total Bacteria: 1g of soil added to 99ml sterile saline (10⁻¹). Serial dilutions made. 1ml of 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻⁶ placed into duplicate plates. Melted PCA added, swirled, solidified. Incubated at 30°C for 48 hours.
Fungi: 1ml of 10⁻³ to 10⁻⁵ dilutions into duplicate plates. Sabouraud agar added. Incubated at 30°C for 5 to 7 days.
Actinomycetes: 2ml aliquots from 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻⁶ dilutions into starch-casein agar tubes. 1ml cyclohexamide added. Rolled, poured onto labeled plates. Incubated at 30°C for 5 to 7 days.
Endospores: Original 10⁻¹ suspension heated at 80°C for 15 minutes. Serial dilutions through 10⁻⁵. PCA added, incubated at 30°C for 48 hours.
| Organism | Dilution Used | Agar Used | Observation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total bacteria | 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻⁶ | Plate count agar | Distinct bacterial colonies formed |
| Fungi | 10⁻³ to 10⁻⁵ | Sabouraud agar | Fungal colonies with mycelium formed |
| Actinomycetes | 10⁻⁴ to 10⁻⁶ | Starch-casein agar | Powdery actinomycete colonies formed |
| Endospores | 10⁻¹ to 10⁻⁵ | Plate count agar | Heat resistant endospore colonies formed |
Different microbial populations were successfully isolated using selective agar media and serial dilution. Heat treatment at 80°C selected for endospore forming bacteria, confirming the importance of selective media in microbial ecology.
Laboratory practicals by Mysterious Rey, Professor of SLT.
Identification of Tools and Measuring Instruments
To identify the tools and measuring instruments used in maintenance activities.
| S/N | Tool | Applications | Precautions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Grip Plier | Gripping, holding and turning components | Do not use on live electrical parts |
| 2 | Cutting Plier | Cutting wires, cables and leads | Keep away from live circuits |
| 3 | Needle Nose Plier | Holding small components in tight spaces | Do not apply excess force, tip can break |
| 4 | Set of Screwdrivers | Tightening and loosening screws | Use correct size, do not use on live parts |
| 5 | Extension Set | Reaching bolts in difficult positions | Ensure correct socket size is used |
| 6 | Allen Key | Hexagonal socket screws and bolts | Use correct size, avoid stripping screws |
| 7 | Tester | Detecting voltage in a circuit | Hold only by insulated handle |
| 8 | Soldering Iron | Melting solder to join components | Place on stand when not in use, ventilate area |
| 9 | Solder Tools | Applying solder to joints | Avoid inhaling fumes |
| 10 | Solder Sucker | Removing excess solder | Allow solder to melt fully before applying |
| S/N | Instrument | Applications | Precautions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Digital Multimeter | Measuring voltage, current and resistance | Select correct range before use |
| 2 | Analog Multimeter | Measuring voltage, current and resistance | Zero pointer before use, handle carefully |
| 3 | Digital Oscilloscope | Displaying and analysing waveforms | Do not exceed input voltage rating |
| 4 | Analog Oscilloscope | Observing signal waveforms on CRT screen | Allow warm up time, avoid strong magnetic fields |
Connection of 5A, 13A, 15A Plug to a Cable
(i) To identify and connect a plug to a flexible wire. (ii) To change a bad plug and fix with a new one.
- Flexible wire, Cord, 5A, 13A and 15A plugs
- Screwdriver, Tester, Cutting plier, Multimeter
A wire was provided and the outer insulator cover was removed. The brown/red/white wire (Live) was cut at 1.5cm, blue/black/grey wire (Neutral) cut at 1.5cm, and green/yellow wire (Earth) left longer. The plug cover was removed with a screwdriver and the fuse taken out. Terminal fixing screw was loosened and cable secured. Green/yellow connected to centre terminal, neutral to left terminal. End of each terminal wire twisted and screws tightened. 13 amps fuse replaced and continuity checked with multimeter. Cover replaced, screw tightened and plug connected to test.
Three wires were successfully identified by colour codes. Live: brown/red/white. Neutral: blue/black/grey. Earth: green/yellow. After connection multimeter confirmed continuity and the testing lamp lit up confirming successful connection.
The 5A, 13A and 15A plugs were successfully connected to flexible wires following correct colour code wiring convention. Continuity testing confirmed all connections were correctly made.
- Always disconnect from power supply before working on any plug or wiring
- Ensure all terminal screws are firmly tightened before connecting to power supply
Component Identification
To identify the passive and active components.
| S/N | Component | ID | Applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Resistor | R | Limit or control current flow |
| 2 | Capacitor | C | Storing electrical charge and filtering signals |
| 3 | Inductor | L | Filters, transformers and oscillators |
| 4 | Diode | D | Rectification, converting AC to DC |
| 5 | LED | LED | Indicator lights in equipment |
| 6 | Transistor (NPN) | Q | Amplification and switching in circuits |
| 7 | Transistor (PNP) | Q | Amplification and switching in circuits |
| 8 | Integrated Circuit | IC | Complex operations: amplification, timing |
| 9 | Transformer | T | Step up or step down voltage in power supply |
| 10 | Fuse | F | Protects circuits from excess current |
Passive and active electronic components were successfully identified. Passive components such as resistors, capacitors and inductors do not require external power. Active components such as transistors, diodes and ICs require external power and can amplify or switch signals.
Component Testing — Diode, Transistor, Capacitor
To use a multimeter to determine the resistance of a diode, transistor and capacitor.
Testing the Diode: Set multimeter to highest resistance range and zeroed. Positive side of diode connected to positive terminal, reading recorded. Connections reversed and reading recorded again.
Testing the Transistor: Red terminal to base and black to collector to check resistance. Connections varied between base, collector and emitter in different combinations and readings recorded.
Testing the Capacitor: Multimeter set to highest microfarad scale. Red probe at one terminal and black at the other. Readings observed and recorded.
| Bias | Digital Reading | Analog Reading |
|---|---|---|
| Forward bias | 0.6V (low resistance) | Low resistance deflection |
| Reverse bias | OL (high resistance) | Pointer barely moves |
| Connection | Digital Reading |
|---|---|
| Red to base, black to collector | Low resistance |
| Red to base, black to emitter | Low resistance |
| Black to base, red to collector | High resistance (OL) |
| Red to collector, black to emitter | High resistance (OL) |
The multimeter successfully tested the diode, transistor and capacitor. Diode showed low resistance in forward bias and high in reverse bias. Transistor showed expected resistance pattern. Capacitor showed initial deflection returning to high resistance confirming good condition.
Resistor Value Measurement
To determine resistor values using colour code and multimeter.
| Colour | 1st Band | 2nd Band | Multiplier | Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Black | 0 | 0 | ×1 | — |
| Brown | 1 | 1 | ×10 | 1% |
| Red | 2 | 2 | ×100 | 2% |
| Orange | 3 | 3 | ×1K | — |
| Yellow | 4 | 4 | ×10K | — |
| Green | 5 | 5 | ×100K | — |
| Blue | 6 | 6 | ×1M | — |
| Gold | — | — | — | ±5% |
| Silver | — | — | — | ±10% |
| S/N | Colour Bands | Resistance Value | AVO Meter | Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brown Black Red | 1000Ω (1KΩ) | 0.98KΩ | Gold ±5% |
| 2 | Yellow Violet Orange | 47000Ω (47KΩ) | 46.8KΩ | Gold ±5% |
| 3 | Red Red Brown | 220Ω | 218Ω | Gold ±5% |
| 4 | Brown Black Orange | 10000Ω (10KΩ) | 9.95KΩ | Gold ±5% |
| 5 | Green Blue Red | 5600Ω (5.6KΩ) | 5.58KΩ | Gold ±5% |
Resistor values were successfully determined using colour code and multimeter. Minor differences between colour code value and multimeter reading were within the tolerance range confirming the resistors were in good working condition.
The Resistor Colour Codes
To use carbon resistor colour code to determine the resistance and tolerance of each resistor.
As many different carbon film resistors as possible were removed from the junk provided. The colour code of each resistor was used to determine the resistance and tolerance values for ten different types. The AVO meter set on OHM meter was then used to determine the resistance value of each resistor.
| S/N | Colour Bands | Resistance Value | AVO Reading | Tolerance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brown Black Red | 1000Ω (1KΩ) | 0.98KΩ | Gold ±5% |
| 2 | Yellow Violet Orange | 47000Ω (47KΩ) | 46.8KΩ | Gold ±5% |
| 3 | Red Red Brown | 220Ω | 218Ω | Gold ±5% |
| 4 | Brown Black Orange | 10000Ω (10KΩ) | 9.95KΩ | Gold ±5% |
| 5 | Green Blue Red | 5600Ω (5.6KΩ) | 5.58KΩ | Gold ±5% |
| 6 | Orange Orange Red | 3300Ω (3.3KΩ) | 3.28KΩ | Silver ±10% |
| 7 | Brown Green Brown | 150Ω | 148Ω | Gold ±5% |
| 8 | Red Violet Yellow | 270000Ω (270KΩ) | 268KΩ | Silver ±10% |
| 9 | Blue Grey Orange | 68000Ω (68KΩ) | 67.5KΩ | Gold ±5% |
| 10 | White Brown Yellow | 910000Ω (910KΩ) | 908KΩ | Silver ±10% |
The colour code method was successfully used to determine resistance and tolerance values of ten different carbon film resistors. AVO meter readings confirmed colour code values with minor differences within tolerance range.
Resistor Combination — Series and Parallel
To determine the series and parallel combination of resistors and compare calculated values with multimeter readings.
- Assorted resistors, Voltmeter, Switch, Prototype board
- Connecting wires, Power supply unit (PSU), Multimeter
| Resistor | Colour Code Value | Multimeter Reading |
|---|---|---|
| R1 | 1000Ω (1KΩ) | 0.98KΩ |
| R2 | 2200Ω (2.2KΩ) | 2.18KΩ |
| R3 | 3300Ω (3.3KΩ) | 3.28KΩ |
| Voltage | Reading |
|---|---|
| V1 | 2.0V |
| V2 | 4.4V |
| V3 | 6.6V |
| V1 + V2 + V3 | 13.0V |
| Supply Voltage Vs | 13.0V |
Series and parallel resistor combinations were successfully set up and measured. Calculated values agreed closely with multimeter readings. In series total resistance increased while in parallel total resistance was less than the smallest individual resistor. Voltage measurements confirmed that sum of individual voltages equals supply voltage.
Laboratory practicals by Mysterious Rey, Professor of SLT.
Glass Cutting Procedures
To learn and perform the various methods used in cutting glass tubing and glass sheets in glass blowing operations.
- Glass tubing of various diameters, Glass sheets, Cutting knife and diamond knife
- Hot glass rod, Iron rod (1/8 inch, 12 inches long), Nichrome wire (9.5 inch, 28 gauge)
- 30 volts power source or step down transformer, Spring tong
- Cotton string and alcohol, Zinc white paste, Cold water in bucket
- Arc saw blade, Straight edge ruler and grease pencil, Bunsen burner
| Method | Suitable For | Key Steps | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1a. Knife Method | Small diameter tubing | Make knife mark, apply thumb pressure on opposite side, pull to separate. Wet with water if needed. | Clean straight break along mark |
| 1b. Hot Point Method | Large diameter tubing | Scratch round tube, apply hot glass rod to mark, add drop of water to weaken, remove rough edges. | Glass cracks and separates along scratch |
| 1c. Flame Method | Larger diameter tubing | Make 2.5cm scratch, adjust flame to pointed tip, rotate tube slowly, blow air on scratch if needed. | Glass cracks along scratch line |
| 1d. Hot Iron Loop | Soft glass, any diameter | Bend iron rod to semicircle, make knife mark, heat rod end, apply to scratch and move away. | Crack extends along desired direction |
| 1e. Electrical Wire | Heavy wall 10mm and above | Make deep knife mark, connect nichrome wire to 30V source, place mark on hot wire, remove. | Clean crack along mark, smooth finish |
| 1f. String and Alcohol | General tubing | Soak string in alcohol, tie round mark, burn off, dip in cold water, strike sharply above cut line. | Cut as clean as diamond cut |
| 1g. Glass Sheet Cutting | Glass sheets | Mark with grease pencil, scratch lightly with cutter, place supports on both sides, tap edge gently. | Clean split along marked line |
All seven glass cutting methods were successfully performed. Each method is suited to a specific glass type or diameter. Proper marking and correct application of heat or pressure are essential for achieving clean accurate cuts. Safety precautions must be observed at all times.
Drilling Glass
To learn and perform the various methods used in drilling and grinding glass in glass blowing operations.
- Steel wire, Drilling machine, Metallic mercury, Turpentine, Camphor, Water
- Moist foam ring, Molten lead, Graver, Cork pieces (convex and concave)
- Iron or steel laps, Fine sand, Emery, Pure lead or tin laps, Tin putty, Willow wood laps
| Method | Suitable For | Key Steps | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2a. Steel Wire Drill | General glass drilling | File steel wire to drill shape, heat to dull red hot, quench in mercury, insert into drilling machine, lubricate with turpentine. | Clean hole drilled through glass |
| 2b. Holes in Thick Glass | Thick glass | Place moist foam ring on area to be perforated with center free equal to desired hole size. Apply molten lead. | Glass and lead fall through creating clean hole |
| 2c. Drilling Optical Glass | Optical glass | Hold graver gently over point to be drilled, activate graver, work from both sides lubricating with water. | Clean precise hole in optical glass |
| 2d. Grinding Glass | Glass surface finishing | Make two cork pieces one convex one concave, use iron laps with fine sand then emery, follow with lead and tin putty. | Smooth polished glass surface |
The various glass drilling and grinding methods were successfully performed. Each method is suited to a specific type and thickness of glass. Proper lubrication with turpentine and water is essential during drilling. Grinding requires progressive use of abrasives from coarse to fine to achieve a smooth polished glass surface.