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On the Blood of the Invertebrata

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2014

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Extract

The author has ascertained the approximate composition of the gases in the blood of certain Invertebrate animals. The apparatus used for this purpose was that of Gautier slightly modified (fig. 1); and the method allows the collection of the blood in vacua (from the time of leaving the vein, &c.) without any alteration in its composition. The glass receiver ACD (left-hand figure), in which the vacuum is made, has a canula E fastened to its lower end. The canula is drawn out into a fine capillary point, which is pushed into the artery, vein, or under the hypodermis, as the case may be. After introducing the canula into the blood system, the tap B is opened and the blood rises into the receiver. The gases are evolved almost immediately, and by means of the pump they are collected over mercury in the tube ab, where their composition is ascertained.

Type
Proceedings
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1891

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References

page 288 note * The liberation of carbonic anhydride is accelerated by previously introducing into the receiver a small quantity of a hot solution of tartaric acid.

page 293 note * Detected by the spectroscope.

page 293 note † See Dr Griffiths' paper in Chemical News, vol. 48, p. 37; also Journal Chemical Society, 1884, p. 94.Google Scholar

page 293 note ‡ In Pinna squamosa, the copper is replaced by manganese.

page 260 note § Fredericq in Archives de Zoologie Experimentale, 1878; see also his book La Lulte pour l'Existence, p. 84.Google Scholar

page 294 note * Concerning the coagulation of the blood of certain Invertebrates, the reader is referred to the important paper by Drs J. B. Haycraft and E. W. Carlier in the Proc. Roy. Soc. Edin., vol. xv., p. 423.