Laboratory Experiments in Microbiology (12th Edition) (What's New in Microbiology)
12th Edition
ISBN: 9780134605203
Author: Ted R. Johnson, Christine L. Case
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 4 Solutions
Laboratory Experiments in Microbiology (12th Edition) (What's New in Microbiology)
Ch. 4 - What other methods can be used to determine...Ch. 4 - What is the primary use of slants? Of deeps?...Ch. 4 - What is the purpose of heating the loop before...Ch. 4 - Prob. 4QCh. 4 - Why is aseptic technique important?Ch. 4 - Why was the arrangement of Lactococcus in the...Ch. 4 - For a bacterium, what evolutionary advantage is...Ch. 4 - How can you tell that the media provided for this...Ch. 4 - Your microbiology lab maintains reference...
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- 1) based on the difference in appearance between mixed culture streak plates and broth culture plates, what would lead you to believe that you have created a pure culture when you inoculated the broths? 2) when using the loop dilution technique to produce pour plates, did all the plates produce isolated colonies? If your goal was to ultimately create pure cultures of E. coli, M. luteus, and S. morcescens, which plate or which dilution would you use, and why would you use this plate? 3) What are the advantages and disadvantages of streak plating compared with pour plating?arrow_forwardyou are given a mixed culture of s. aureus, E. coli and P. aeruginosa. how would you isolate each other from this mixed culture?( Besides using plate technique)arrow_forwardIf you were using the quadrant streak plate method to plate a very dilute broth culture (with many fewer bacteria than the broth used for the plate pictured here), would you expect to see single, isolated colonies in quadrant 4 or quadrant 3? Explain your answer.arrow_forward
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