Talk:K12 Comparative Embryology

From Embryology

Conklin EG. The Organization and Cell-Lineage of the Ascidian Egg (1905) J. Acad., Nat. Sci. Phila. 13, 1.

Conklin, E. G. (1905). The organization and cell lineage of the ascidian egg. J. Acad., Nat. Sci. Phila. 13, 1.

https://archive.org/details/organizationcell00conk

Edwin G. Conklin took eggs of the tunicate Styela partita, a sea squirt that resides in the waters off the coast of Massachusetts, and followed the fates of each cell in the embryo until they differentiated into particular structures.

Conklin, E. G. (1905). Mosaic development in ascidian eggs. J. Exp. Zool. 2, 145.


Newborn.jpg
Mouse.jpg
Rat.jpg
Chick icon.jpg
Frog-icon.png
Zebrafish-icon.png
Fly-icon.png
C elegans.jpg
Sow and piglet.jpg
Rabbit.jpg
Dog-adult.jpg
Guineapig icon.jpg
Cowcalf.jpg
Echidna.jpg
Red-necked wallaby.jpg
Platypus.jpg
Bat icon.jpg
Lizard embryo 03.jpg
Grasshopper- female.jpg
Medaka.jpg
Newborn.jpg
Bat icon.jpg
Cowcalf.jpg
Chick icon.jpg
Dog-adult.jpg
Echidna.jpg
Fly-icon.png
Frog-icon.png
Grasshopper- female.jpg
Guineapig icon.jpg
Red-necked wallaby.jpg
Lizard embryo 03.jpg
Mouse.jpg
Sow and piglet.jpg
Platypus.jpg
Rabbit.jpg
Rat.jpg


C elegans.jpg
Zebrafish-icon.png
Medaka.jpg