Scientific American Supplement, No. 643, April 28, 1888 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 643, April 28, 1888.

Scientific American Supplement, No. 643, April 28, 1888 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about Scientific American Supplement, No. 643, April 28, 1888.

And now I bid you, as your president, farewell.  It has been all pleasure to me to serve you.  It has enlarged my friendships and my interests, and although my work has linked me with the society for many years, I have derived much profit from this more organic union with it; and it is a source of encouragement to me, and will, I am sure, be to you, that, after having done with simple pleasure what I could, I am to be succeeded in this place of honor by so distinguished a student of the phenomena of minute life as Dr. Hudson.  I can but wish him as happy a tenure of office as mine has been.

* * * * *

INQUIRIES REGARDING THE INCUBATOR.

P.H.  JACOBS.

Space in the Rural is valuable, and so important a subject as artificial incubation cannot perhaps be made entirely plain to a novice in a few articles; but as interested parties have written for additional information, it may interest others to answer them here.  Among the questions asked are:  “Does the incubator described in the Rural dispense entirely with the use of a lamp, using at intervals a bucket of water to maintain proper temperature?  I fear this will not be satisfactory unless the incubator is kept in a warm room or cellar.”

All incubators must be kept in a warm location, whether operated by a lamp or otherwise.  The warmer the room or cellar, the less warmth required to be supplied.  Bear in mind that the incubator recommended has four inches of sawdust surrounding it, and more sawdust would still be an advantage.  The sawdust is not used to protect against the outside temperature, but to absorb and hold a large amount of heat, and that is the secret of its success.  The directions given were to first fill the tank with boiling water and allow it to remain for 24 hours.  In the meantime the sawdust absorbs the heat, and more boiling water is then added until the egg-drawer is about 110 or 115 degrees.  By this time there is a quantity of stored heat in the sawdust.  The eggs will cool the drawer to 103.  The loss of heat (due to its being held by the sawdust) will be very slow.  All that is needed then is to supply that which will be lost in 12 hours, and a bucket of boiling water should keep the heat about correct, if added twice a day, but it may require more, as some consideration must be given to fluctuations of the temperature of the atmosphere.  The third week of incubation, owing to animal heat from the embryo chicks, a bucket of boiling water will sometimes hold temperature for 24 hours.  No objection can be urged against attaching a lamp arrangement, but a lamp is dangerous at night, while the flame must be regulated according to temperature.  The object of giving the hot water method was to avoid lamps.  We have a large number of them in use (no lamps) here, and they are equal to any others in results.

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Scientific American Supplement, No. 643, April 28, 1888 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.