Page:Laboratory Manual of the Anatomy of the Rat (Hunt 1924).djvu/19

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
EXTERNAL ASPECT OF THE RAT
5

squirrel. Note the scales on the tail. How are they arranged? Are scales characteristic of mammals? In what groups of vertebrates are scales usually found?

The anus, or opening through which the residual materials (feces) from the digestive tube pass, is immediately ventral to the base of the tail. The conspicuous swelling ventral to the anus of the male rat is the scrotum, which contains the two testes. Sometimes the testes lie up in the body cavity instead of in the scrotum, in which case the size of the latter is very much reduced. The external opening of the male's urogenital system is located mid-ventrally near the anterior end of the scrotum. Carefully insert one blade of a pair of scissors into this orifice and slit the skin, lengthwise of the animal, for three or four millimeters. Note that the foreskin (prepuce), which is hairy externally, surrounds the distal end (glans) of the penis. Examine now the corresponding region of the female. There are three openings in the female: the anus, ventral to the base of the tail; ventral to the anus is the vaginal orifice, or exit from the female reproductive organs; below this orifice the opening from the excretory system at the distal end of a prominent elevation. How do the relations between these openings in the female rat compare with the corresponding openings in other female mammals?

Carefully observe the hair color of your animal. If you are working with a wild rat scrutinize the distribution of the pigment within individual hairs. Is each hair of the same color throughout? Compare the hair color of the rat with that of other wild animals, if they are available either alive or mounted. Compare the color of the albino's eyes with the eye color of the wild rat.

If time permits, sketch the lateral view of the dead animal.