Detail Page

  • 670415378493335207620951619939820PublicAssets/3656A fruit fly ovary, shown here, contains as many as 20 eggs. Fruit flies are not merely tiny insects that buzz around overripe fruit--they are a venerable scientific tool. Research on the flies has shed light on many aspects of human biology, including biological rhythms, learning, memory and neurodegenerative diseases. Another reason fruit flies are so useful in a lab (and so successful in fruit bowls) is that they reproduce rapidly. About three generations can be studied in a single month. Related to image <a href="/Pages/DetailPage.aspx?imageID2=3607" target="_blank">3607</a>.Denise Montell, University of California, Santa BarbaraHogan Tang and Denise Montell, Johns Hopkins University and University of California, Santa BarbaraPhotograph

    Topic Tags:

    CellsGenes

    Fruit fly ovary_2

    A fruit fly ovary, shown here, contains as many as 20 eggs. Fruit flies are not merely tiny insects that buzz around overripe fruit--they are a venerable scientific tool. Research on the flies has shed light on many aspects of human biology, including biological rhythms, learning, memory and neurodegenerative diseases. Another reason fruit flies are so useful in a lab (and so successful in fruit bowls) is that they reproduce rapidly. About three generations can be studied in a single month. Related to image 3607.

    Source

    Denise Montell, University of California, Santa Barbara

    Credit Line

    Hogan Tang and Denise Montell, Johns Hopkins University and University of California, Santa Barbara

    Record Type

    Photograph

    ID

    3656

My Images/Videos