Worm Watch Lab Talk
#bulge
Ouch. #bulge
I thought it was just an egg but then suddenly the baby poked its head out. Possibly the hatching moment.
#speedy 36
#bulge This bulge, unlike the others, results in an egg-laying.
#speedy 49 camera movements
#speedy 38 movements
#speedy 40 camera movements
I feel sorry for this one. 😦 Between the spastic outlines and the large number of eggs already present it's difficult to see new laying.
Almost looks like it's on a mission to clean up the old trails.
Spending most of its time in reverse. Maybe I haven't paid close attention to the others but this is the first time seeing this.
#speedy 39 camera movements. The worm slowed significantly when re-entering the food.
#speedy If camera movement data were included with the video cuts, the fastest worms could be found by counting the movements. 36 movements
Deformed worm? Jumbo egg? Contaminant stuck to the worm? Strange.
The camera accidentally tracked onto a bubble.
You want to count egg laying events, not eggs themselves. See: http://talk.wormwatchlab.org/#/boards/BWS0000002/discussions/DWS0000008
Oh man, ultra egg layer.
So that's how it happens.
Ah! Three eggs! Good show.
Egg laying without the software outline.
I've noticed two eggs often pop out at once. Maybe there's an egg jam in the uterus.
They must have already been there. See anatomical diagram: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caenorhabditis_elegans
Bloop!
See: http://talk.wormwatchlab.org/#/subjects/AWS0001krj
Oh, the baby. You had me looking for an egg!
Egg is clearly visible in the middle and then strangely seems to disappear.
Got you, sneaky little eggs. Two eggs at once.
#baby Three babies!
It's like it's carrying the egg with it.
I noticed the software gets confused sometimes when the worm is crossing perpendicularly over an existing worm trail.
#baby Two babies clearly visible at the start of this one. I'm guessing this is actually going to be quite common.
#bulge
#bulge
Ouch. #bulge
I thought it was just an egg but then suddenly the baby poked its head out. Possibly the hatching moment.
#speedy 36
#bulge This bulge, unlike the others, results in an egg-laying.
#speedy 49 camera movements
#speedy 38 movements
#bulge
#bulge
#bulge
#speedy 40 camera movements
#bulge
#bulge
I feel sorry for this one. 😦 Between the spastic outlines and the large number of eggs already present it's difficult to see new laying.
Almost looks like it's on a mission to clean up the old trails.
Spending most of its time in reverse. Maybe I haven't paid close attention to the others but this is the first time seeing this.
#speedy 39 camera movements. The worm slowed significantly when re-entering the food.
#speedy If camera movement data were included with the video cuts, the fastest worms could be found by counting the movements. 36 movements
Deformed worm? Jumbo egg? Contaminant stuck to the worm? Strange.
The camera accidentally tracked onto a bubble.
You want to count egg laying events, not eggs themselves. See: http://talk.wormwatchlab.org/#/boards/BWS0000002/discussions/DWS0000008
Oh man, ultra egg layer.
So that's how it happens.
Ah! Three eggs! Good show.
Egg laying without the software outline.
I've noticed two eggs often pop out at once. Maybe there's an egg jam in the uterus.
They must have already been there. See anatomical diagram: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caenorhabditis_elegans
Bloop!
See: http://talk.wormwatchlab.org/#/subjects/AWS0001krj
Oh, the baby. You had me looking for an egg!
Egg is clearly visible in the middle and then strangely seems to disappear.
Got you, sneaky little eggs. Two eggs at once.
#baby Three babies!
It's like it's carrying the egg with it.
I noticed the software gets confused sometimes when the worm is crossing perpendicularly over an existing worm trail.
#baby Two babies clearly visible at the start of this one. I'm guessing this is actually going to be quite common.