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Bacteriology Lab. Susan Hollingsworth Aaron Kaiser Biology 110 Lab # smh092404. Purpose:. To observe multiple environments that harbor bacterial growth and determine which environment under investigation is most conducive to bacterial growth Environments under investigation: air soil
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Bacteriology Lab Susan Hollingsworth Aaron Kaiser Biology 110 Lab # smh092404
Purpose: • To observe multiple environments that harbor bacterial growth and determine which environment under investigation is most conducive to bacterial growth • Environments under investigation: air soil washed/unwashed hands door handle of men’s bathroom raw chicken pond water
Hypothesis: • Pond Water • largest and most diverse population of bacteria due to a vast array of living and decomposing organisms that are vulnerable to bacterial colonization • aquatic medium that receives sunlight (some bacteria are photosynthetic) • exposed to air which transports bacterial spores.
Materials: • 7 sterile Petri dishes with nutrient agar • Wax pencil • 9 bacterial inoculating loops • Sterile cotton swab • Piece of raw chicken • Soil sample • Pond water sample • Hand soap • Sterile water • Parafilm strips • Light microscope • Dissecting microscope • incubator
Method: • Label each Petri dish • “Air” sample • Use Streak Plate method to apply sample (b) (c) (a) Figure 1. Isolating bacterial colonies using the “Streak Plate” method.
Data Interpretations: • Unwashed/Washed hand sample • Recover dish labeled “air.” • Wrap cultures with Parafilm and incubate upside down for 1 week. The Petri dishes will be analyzed by using colony morphology characteristics to see which one has the most species of bacteria. This will be accomplished by identifying and tabulating the number of different colonies present in each sample.
Table 1. Bacteria colony morphology: Air Fig. 2 Bacteria present in Air environemnt
Table 2. Bacteria colony morphology: Chicken Fig 3. Bacteria found on Chicken environment Table 3. Bacteria colony morphology: Soil Fig 4. Bacteria found on soil environment
Table 5. Bacteria colony morphology: washed hand Fig 5. Bacteria found on washed and unwashed hand environments
Table 6. Bacteria colony morphology: pond water Fig 7. Bacteria found on pond water environment
Table 7. Bacteria colony morphology: Men’s bathroom door Fig 8. Bacteria found on bathroom door environment
Side Study: Effect of Antibiotics on E. coli growth Fig 9. E coli growth among antibiotics