Skip to content
Aquatic Safari
Edwards Lab - Eco-Physiology, Eco-Toxicology, Environmental Health
  • Research
    • Research Methods
    • Protocols
  • Teaching
  • Africa Travel Blog
    • Botswana
      • About the Okavango
      • Adventure and Field Research
      • Conservation in Botswana
      • Living and Working in Botswana
        • Preparing to Go
        • Getting to Botswana
        • Our First Week
        • Living in Maun
    • South Africa
    • Southern Africa Environmental News
  • CV and Publications
  • Lab News
  • Contact
  • Credits and Disclaimers

Protocols

Removing otoliths (ear bones) from a fish head:  a short video.

Otoliths are used to determine how old a fish is.  This is because otoliths grow in rings.  Much like a tree, a fish adds one ring of bone to its otoliths each year.  So if you count the rings, you know how old the fish was in years.

Using mosquito netting to create improvised histology cassettes.

Recent Posts

  • Thea named Carnegie African Diaspora Fellow! May 17, 2018
  • New paper on nitrate physiology April 28, 2018
  • Thea quoted in Nature Medicine February 8, 2018
  • Lab News – New JoVE publication January 29, 2018
  • Lab News – Thea presenting on nitrate ecotox at UGA January 29, 2018

Recent Comments

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org
    Copyright © 2025 Aquatic Safari — Primer WordPress theme by GoDaddy