Team:StanfordBrownSpelman/Safety

From 2014.igem.org

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   <h3><center><a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:StanfordBrownSpelman/Safety">Safety</a></h3>
   <h3><center><a href="https://2014.igem.org/Team:StanfordBrownSpelman/Safety">Safety</a></h3>
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<h7><center><a href="#" id="intro">Summary</a> ● <a href="#" id="methods">Live Wasps</a> ● <a href="#" id="chassis">Amberless Chassis</a> ● <a href="#" id="links">Safety Form</a> ● <a href="#" id="pics">Our Lab</a></h7>
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<h7><center><a href="#" id="intro">Summary</a> ● <a href="#" id="methods">Live Wasps</a> ● <a href="#" id="pics">Wasp Trapping Images</a> ● <a href="#" id="chassis">Amberless Chassis</a> ● <a href="#" id="links">Safety Form</a> ● <a href="#" id="pics">Our Lab</a></h7>
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                         <h5 id="int"><center>Summary</h5>
                         <h5 id="int"><center>Summary</h5>
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Dr. Kavanaugh's tutelage got us through our wasp wranglin' escapade injury-free and with minimal stress to the wasps. He provided us with butterfly nets, with which it was an easy feat to catch the wasps in mid-air, as they fly rather slowly when near their nests. The wasps are not aggressive unless their nest is disturbed or if they've been trapped in a net. While both of these situations did inevitably occur, we were safe to insert gloved hands into the nets to coax trapped wasps into empty 2mL tubes, as the wasps cannot sting through nitrile gloves. Once in the tubes, we placed the wasps in an insulated container with ice. This calmed them down to a lethargic state, at which point we could proceed with dissections and RNA extraction. </h6>  
Dr. Kavanaugh's tutelage got us through our wasp wranglin' escapade injury-free and with minimal stress to the wasps. He provided us with butterfly nets, with which it was an easy feat to catch the wasps in mid-air, as they fly rather slowly when near their nests. The wasps are not aggressive unless their nest is disturbed or if they've been trapped in a net. While both of these situations did inevitably occur, we were safe to insert gloved hands into the nets to coax trapped wasps into empty 2mL tubes, as the wasps cannot sting through nitrile gloves. Once in the tubes, we placed the wasps in an insulated container with ice. This calmed them down to a lethargic state, at which point we could proceed with dissections and RNA extraction. </h6>  
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<li><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/e/eb/SBSiGEM2014_Wasps2.jpg"></li><h6>Kyla Ugwu examines a wasp she trapped during our specimen collection expedition at the beginning of summer 2014.</h6><br>
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    <li><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/f/f6/SBSiGEM2014_Wasps5.jpg"></li><h6>Ben Doughty and Eli Block swing in attempts to catch flying paper wasps in Petaluma, California.</h6><br>
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<li><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/2/27/SBSiGEM2014_Wasps1.jpg"></li><h6>Ben Doughty collecting a live paper wasp inside his bug net.</h6><br>
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  <li><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/8/8e/SBSiGEM2014_Wasps4.jpg"></li><h6>Our team of wasp trappers celebrates our success with California Academy of Sciences entomologist Dave Kavanaugh.</h6><br>
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  <li><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2014/7/71/SBSiGEM2014_Wasps11.jpg"></li><h6>A macroscopic image of a paper wasp we collected and stored in a tube of RNA Later for preservation.</h6><br>
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Revision as of 23:55, 16 October 2014

Stanford–Brown–Spelman iGEM 2014 — BioBricks

Safety Form
Our lab safety form can be found here .
Our Lab

Our lab is unique in that it is located in building 239, the Astrobiology and Life Sciences Research Laboratory, at NASA Ames Research Center. The surface of the building is pockmarked to look like the surface of the moon.

Besides being the home for the Stanford-Brown-Spelman iGEM team, The Astrobiology and Life Sciences Research Laboratories contain the Human Environmental Test Facility and the Advanced Studies Laboratories (ASL), used for research in biomedicine, astrobiology, ecosystem science, Closed Ecological Life-Support Systems (CELSS), Environmental Controls and Life Support Systems (ECLSS), nanotechnology, and Synthetic Biology. The Astrobiology facilities include basic and applied research laboratories in astrochemistry, the cosmic evolution of biogenic elements and molecules, planetary pre-biotic chemistry, geology, the early organization and evolution of life, the evolution of complex organisms, and ecological studies. Some laboratory facilities include instrument development capabilities and analytical equipment for the characterization of gas and aqueous chemistry, instruments for the detection of various biomarkers including sugars and organics, microbiology facilities, including the culture of microbial mat communities and planetary protection testing, electron and RAMAN microscopy facilities, molecular biology capabilities, and bioinformatics computational capabilities. Laboratories in this facility are operated by NASA personnel and the University of California.

Image:Example2_Lab_1.png|The building our lab is in! Image:Example2_Lab_2.png|The inside of our lab! Image:Example2_Lab_3.png|Team Member 3 doing an experiment Image:Example2_Lab_4.png|Working in biosafety cabinets Image:Example2_Lab_5.png|Team all gloved up and ready for work! Image:Example2_Lab_6.png|Equipment that we use to do SCIENCE! Image:Example2_Lab_7.png|We decorated this part of our lab Image:Example2_Lab_8.png|Whatever else you want
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