Brock Biology of Microorganisms (15th Edition)
15th Edition
ISBN: 9780134261928
Author: Michael T. Madigan, Kelly S. Bender, Daniel H. Buckley, W. Matthew Sattley, David A. Stahl
Publisher: PEARSON
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Textbook Question
Chapter 19.1, Problem 1CR
Why do the results of a direct enrichment of an environmental sample and enrichment following dilution of the sample often differ with respect to the types of populations recovered?
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Chapter 19 Solutions
Brock Biology of Microorganisms (15th Edition)
Ch. 19.1 - Describe the enrichment strategy behind...Ch. 19.1 - Why is sulfate (So42) added to a Winogradsky...Ch. 19.1 - What is enrichment bias? How does dilution reduce...Ch. 19.1 - Why do the results of a direct enrichment of an...Ch. 19.2 - What is a pure culture and why is obtaining one...Ch. 19.2 - How does the agar dilution method differ from...Ch. 19.2 - What criteria serve to demonstrate that a culture...Ch. 19.3 - How might you isolate a morphologically unique...Ch. 19.3 - What is meant by high-throughput in culturing...Ch. 19.3 - What feature of high-throughput culturing relieves...
Ch. 19.4 - How does viability staining differ from stains...Ch. 19.4 - What types of environments limit the application...Ch. 19.4 - Why is it incorrect to say that the GFP is a...Ch. 19.4 - Prob. 1CRCh. 19.5 - What structure in the cell is the target for...Ch. 19.5 - FISH and CARD-FISH can be used to reveal different...Ch. 19.5 - Why is CARD-FISH more suitable than FISH for...Ch. 19.6 - What could you conclude from PCR/DGGE analysis of...Ch. 19.6 - What surprising finding has come out of many...Ch. 19.6 - How has next-generation sequencing technology...Ch. 19.6 - QWhich method, ARISA or T-RFLP, would provide more...Ch. 19.7 - Prob. 1MQCh. 19.7 - What are the advantages and disadvantages of...Ch. 19.7 - Why might a microarray be superior to using...Ch. 19.8 - Prob. 1MQCh. 19.8 - How do environmental genomic approaches differ...Ch. 19.8 - Prob. 3MQCh. 19.8 - Prob. 1CRCh. 19.9 - Prob. 1MQCh. 19.9 - If a large pulse of organic matter entered the...Ch. 19.9 - Q What are the major advantages of radioisotopic...Ch. 19.10 - What is the simplest explanation for why lunar...Ch. 19.10 - What is the expected isotopic composition of...Ch. 19.10 - How might exchange of metabolites among members of...Ch. 19.10 - Will autotrophic organisms contain more or less...Ch. 19.11 - How could NanoSIMS be used to identify a...Ch. 19.11 - Prob. 2MQCh. 19.11 - How does MAR-FISH link microbial diversity and...Ch. 19.11 - Q What can MAR-FISH tell you that FISH alone...Ch. 19.12 - How can stable isotope probing reveal the identity...Ch. 19.12 - What key method is required to do genomics on a...Ch. 19.12 - Prob. 3MQCh. 19.12 - How would you use cytometric cell sorting to...Ch. 19 - Design an experiment for measuring the activity of...Ch. 19 - You wish to know whether Archaea exist in a lake...Ch. 19 - Design an experiment to solve the following...Ch. 19 - Design a SIP experiment that would allow you to...
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- Why would the optical tweezers be a method superior to dilution and liquid enrichment for obtaining an organism present in a sample in low numbers?arrow_forwardDistinguish between pre-enrichment, enrichment and selective enrichment liquid cultures.arrow_forwardExplain the Biozhazards that may occur, when performer performing analysis of biological samples on Mass Spectromtery. Note: Please provide typed solution, not handwritten. Thumbs up in advance...arrow_forward
- Explain each four steps in Product Development that was given below: a.) Isolation of microbes that produce product of interest. b.) Screening for best producing strain;naturally or mutation or genetic engineering c.)Optimization of production condition d.)Scaling up from lab scale ( up to 10L) to industrial scale (> 10,000L)arrow_forwardHow can the enrichment culture technique be used medically?arrow_forwardHow to reduce or eliminate aerial contamination inside the laboratory?arrow_forward
- Describe three problems associated with using the standard plate count method for determining the number of bacteria in a sample.arrow_forwardKoch's postulates include all of the following EXCEPT O 1) Isolate the organism in pure culture. The symptoms of the test animal may vary from the symptoms seen in the O 2) patient. O 3) Inoculate a test animal with the isolated organism. 4) The organism must be isolated from the test animal in pure culture. 5) The organism isolated from the test animal must match the organism isolated from the patient.arrow_forward1. A plate with a final dilution factor of 107 produced 210 colonies. a) What was the original concentration in the sample? b) If you were to dilute the original sample with a dilution factor of 108, how many colonies would you count on the plate? c) If you were to dilute the original sample with a dilution factor of 106, how many colonies would you count on the plate? 2. Sally Monella found 344 bacterial colonies on one of her plates. She had prepared this plate after a serial dilution of a culture of Yersinia pestis. She had pipetted 1 ml sample of diluted Yersinia pestis from a tube with the overall dilution factor of 106 into a plate and covered it with agar. She used this plate to calculate the concentration in cells/ml of a bacterial culture. a) How many organisms were in the original culture? b) Were her results valid? Why or why not?arrow_forward
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