Lessian Posted April 2, 2010 Posted April 2, 2010 Hello. Just wanting some info re preparing samples for permanant slides. 'dry' things I have no problem with, since they are not at risk of mould attack or decay etc. my question is this: - if I want to do a permanant slide of something living eg bacteria or other cells, how do I prepare them? - do I need to do anything in particular to make them more visable eg stain, and in what situations would I use what stains? - do I have to allow food for the little guys, or can I just seal down the cover slip as is? - how do I preserve the little bacteria or whatever on the slide so I can continue to admire them in a years time? Ta thanks for any help with this one. lol, not even really sure what question I should be asking exactly, so I am hoping there is someone out there who can understand what I am trying to do.
CharonY Posted April 2, 2010 Posted April 2, 2010 Usually you cannot keep anything alive under that condition. You generally kill, fix and stain them (not necessarily in that order).
Mr Skeptic Posted April 2, 2010 Posted April 2, 2010 You might be able to make yourself a closed micro-ecosystem. Kind of like those enclosed goldfish bowls. You'd need to have photosynthetic organisms and something that eats them, you'd have to keep it illuminated, and I don't know if there is any way you could prevent something from killing off a necessary part of such a small ecosystem. Space scientists tried to make a similar closed small ecosystem with humans, but it didn't really work. Anyhow, I think dead, stained critters is probably as good as you can get for a permanent slide.
CharonY Posted April 2, 2010 Posted April 2, 2010 If you manage to create a working ecosystem on a microsclide level, you are in for a nice publication. The best to date possible is using microfluidic systems as microfermenters. But you still need in and outputs.
Lessian Posted April 3, 2010 Author Posted April 3, 2010 ok, so the practical consensus is that a permanant bacterial slide will have dead stained bodies instead of living beasties. next questions: - is there a particular stain used for such things? - do the bodies need to be preserved in any way or are they ok as is? Ta thanks for all the help with this one, I have a number of colonies stashed in the fridge not so eagerly awaiting their fate
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