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Growing Bacteria in Petri Dishes Take samples and see what will grow in an agar Petri dish. email to friend; print this page ... Watch the 3rd graders at Wilder Elementary growing bacteria...
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www.stevespanglerscience.com/experiment/00000165
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For students growing bacteria at home without the supervision of a teacher (for example, investigating bacteria growth at various places around the house), it's important to use an agar formulation that does not preferentially grow one kind of bacteria over another.
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www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/project_id...
www.sciencebuddies.org/science-fair-projects/project_ideas/MicroBio_Agar.shtml
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MadSciNet: Questions about growing bacteria. ... Microbiological media Are there vegetable and meat based agars made for culturing E. coli? Gelatin agar? Growing bacteria (blood agar) Brain Heart Infusion Agar What is the red medium in Petrie dishes?
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www.madsci.org/FAQs/micro/culture.html
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As for temperature, if you are growing bacteria on blood agar plates it usually implies that you are trying to culture bacteria which live in an animal. Therefore you would want to incubate the plates at the same temperature as the internal environment of the animal.
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www.madsci.org/posts/archives/feb98/884801237.Mi.r.html
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knox gelatin, agar media, petri dishes: Growing bacteria and fungi requires time and preparation. They have to have a substrat to grow on and nutrients for energy. The usual substrat is agar media with nutrient material added. ... If you want to know more about growing the bacteria get back to me. Fungus is easier to grow.
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en.allexperts.com/q/Biology-664/growing-bacteria.htm
en.allexperts.com/q/Biology-664/growing-bacteria.htm
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Ask A Scientist ... Molecular Biology Archive ... The agar can be melted by boiling, and then held in a water bath at 45 degrees until use. Then pour it into a sterile plastic petri dish and put your fingertips into the molten agar.
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www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/mole00/mole00346.htm
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Jennifer A Buckner Answer: The easiest way would be to determine the number of living bacteria present before and after treatment. You can do this by spreading a small volume of a cell suspension on a nutrient agar surface in a petri plate.
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www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/bio99/bio99181.htm
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Sterile powdered agar with nutrients can be mixed with water, ... Most bacteria collected in the environment will not be harmful. However, once they multiply into millions of colonies in a petri dish they become more of a hazard. Be sure to protect open cuts with rubber gloves and never ingest or breathe in growing bacteria.
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www.sciencecompany.com/sci-exper/petridishes.htm
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He noted bacteria growing on a spoiled potato and realized that each colony he saw grew from one bacterium that had landed on the potato. He realized he could remove a bit of one of the colonies and transfer it to a sterile medium to start a ... Because agar is a complex polysaccharide, most bacteria cannot digest it,
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biology.clc.uc.edu/courses/bio106/bacteria.htm
biology.clc.uc.edu/courses/bio106/bacteria.htm
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