Monthly Archives: December 2019

New Space!

After a long, tiring semester, we have moved into a new location in a shiny new building.

The Biomedical Sciences and Engineering building opened to great hoopla in November.  Local and state bigwigs participated in the ribbon cutting, but, more importantly, so did some Biological Sciences students.

 

Official opening of the new building. Dignitaries include Stew Edelestein, the Executive Director of USG (center in dark suit), Larry Hogan, Maryland Governor (second from right), Marc Elrich, County Executive (Left of Stew), and Mikal Abraha, Associated Students President and Biological Sciences senior (3rd from left).

During all the hubbub, the students in the Cell Biology Lab course were going full speed in their new cell culture facility upstairs. A few even made their way into a Washington Post story about the event.

Although the building was officially open, it has token a while for it to be truly ready for use. Even now, there are contractors coming and going to put the finishing touches on the structure, and some necessities, such as ice machines are on the way.

Nonetheless, we made the move to our new space last week. It has taken months of preparation to have the spaces ready for the equipment, and the equipment ready for the spaces. We have been running Cell Biology, Neurobiology, and Physics labs all in the same room, so it will be luxurious to have two large, well laid-out lab spaces and associated preparation areas.

Neurobiology Lab Space, before moving all the equipment in. Great layout, and point exhausts in case we ever work with toxic fumes.

The most important space for the slug project is the new “preserved specimen” room. Someone must have decided that we would be dissecting cadavers, so we have a prep room devoted to dead things, and point exhausts over the lab benches to ventilate fumes from preservatives.

Since we have no plans to store pickled carcasses, the preserved specimen room will make an excellent “live specimen” room. The room is separate from the rest of the lab, so animals can be kept away from chemicals, and it has marine grade shelving perfect for aquaria.

Marine grade steel shelves in the live animal room.
Sink and counter in live animal room.

On top of that, it has a floor sink for washing tanks and other equipment.

Floor Sink in animal room, Perfect for cleaning tanks and equipment.

It took about two full days to set up the plumbing, to move the slug and algae tanks, and to get the control system set back up. Big thanks to Paul, Kevin, and the rest of the IT crew for helping me to get the controller connected to the local network.

The Elysia and Bryopsis system in place. Slug tanks at top, algae tanks in middle, and sump and chiller at bottom. December 24, 2019.

The wiring is still a bit messy, but that can wait until I get my office and the two labs unpacked. Meantime, there are about a dozen slugs enjoying their new home.

Elysia and Bryopsis in the new animal room.

The slugs will soon be joined by the earthworms, crickets, and crayfish for the Neurobiology Lab course.

Posts will probably continue to be sparse for a while. Elysia is still a wonderful system for teaching neurobiology, and I expect some of the students to use them for projects this semester. In the longer term, I am excited about developing multi-unit recording methods to study the activity many nerve cells at a time during sensory processing. However, that will be on hold for a little while while I work on a few other things.