BIOLOGY; CYTOLOGY; PART 3 by Professor Fink
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 เม.ย. 2012
- In Cytology; Part 3 Professor Fink describes Food Vacuoles, Lysosomes ("Suicide Bags"), Plant Cell Central Vacuole, fresh-water Protozoan Contractile Vacuoles, Mitochondria, 3 types of Plastids in Plant Cells (including Chloroplasts, Chromoplasts & Amyloplasts), and 3 microtubule-based structures (Centrioles, Flagella & Cilia). Reference is made to apoptosis (autolysis) and 4 examples are given (including formation of embryonic fingers & toes, atrophy of the womb at menopause, atrophy of a tadpole's tail during metamorphosis & autolysis of viral-infected human cells). In this video, Professor Fink also describes mitochondrial & chloroplast DNA, the role of cilia in the respiratory tract and Fallopian Tubes.
Check-out professor fink's web-site or additional resources in Biology, Anatomy, Physiology & Pharmacology: www.professorfink.com
Down-loadable e-books of the Lecture Outlines by Professor Fink (as well as "hard copy" versions) can be purchased from the WLAC Bookstore at: onlinestore.wlac.edu/fink.asp
I feel like I can be a Doctor by just watching you. This is just a gift, Sir. God bless you for your efforts.
Greetings from Brazil to Professor Fink! Simply genious! A natural talent to share knowledge! Thank you for your absolutely perfect lectures!
Than you SIR. 9+0, 9+2, models gives great explanation.
How much knowledge do you have on general chemistry and physics?. Would be fantastic if you could make a series of lectures on these subjects, just as brilliant as you have on biology. Please, let us know.
Thank You very much professor fink ....I really wish all my medical teachers would be like you
The idea of fertilization really made me amazed especially how the pregnancy sometimes could happen outside the womb .
Thanks for the great lectures professor Fink. I really enjoy when you teach by giving good examples.
I just want to notice that when you said that potatos (i'm assuming S. tuberosum) are part of the root system, actually it's part of the stem of a plant (a tuber). Onions are also part of the stem system (a bulb). On the other hand, sugar beats are part of the root system (tuberous root). They may just look like the same structure, but they differ on some morphological and anatomical aspects.
you are the best, thank you so much, You have made my life so much easier.
So efficiently explained.
That's awesome teaching by you Prof. I really appreciate
Thank you for all your help!!
If only my bio professor was half as good as you are professor Fink
you discuss it good.'made it look a lot easier to understand.thanks
Excellent
thank you so much for your help
this is really good thanks alot
clear understanding
Anybody know the book he talks about?
sooooooooo sick
Thank you for all your help!!