Microbial Growth Test Questions – Flashcards
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Buffer |
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Used in media to neutralize acids |
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Psychrophile |
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The general term for organisms capable of growth at 0°C |
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Thermophile |
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Capable of growth at high temperatures; optimum 50-60°C |
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Extreme Halophile |
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Adapted to high salt concentrations, which are required for growth |
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Plasmolysis |
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A phenomenon that occurs when bacteria are placed in high salt concentrations |
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Psychrotrophs |
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Term used in text for organisms that grow well at refrigerator temperatures; optimum growth is at temperatures of 20-30°C |
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Capnophile |
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Microbes that grow better at high CO2 |
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Hyperthermophile |
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Members of the archaea with an optimum growth temperature of 80°C or higher |
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Hydrogel |
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The matrix that makes up a biofilm |
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Catalase |
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An enzyme acting upon hydrogen peroxide |
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Nitrogen Fixation |
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Rhizobium bacteria do this in symbiosis with leguminous plants |
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Obligate Aerobe |
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Requires atmospheric oxygen to grow |
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Microaerophile |
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Requires atmospheric oxygen, but in lower than normal concentrations |
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Aerotolerant anaerobe |
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Does not use oxygen, but grows readily in its presence |
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Obligate Anaerobe |
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Does not use oxygen and usually finds it toxic |
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Peptones |
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Important source of energy, carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur requirements in complex media |
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Peroxidase |
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Breaks down hydrogen peroxide without generation of oxygen |
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Hydroxyl Radical |
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Formed in cytoplasm by ionizing radiation |
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Catalase |
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An enzyme that converts hydrogen peroxide into oxygen and water |
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Superoxide radicals |
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The toxic form of oxygen that is neutralized by superoxide dismutase - synonym for superoxide anions |
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Oxyrase |
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A component added to some culture media that makes the Petri plate into a self-contained anaerobic chamber |
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Streak Plate |
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Isolation method for getting pure cultures; uses an inoculating loop to trace a pattern of inoculum on a solid medium |
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Spread Plate |
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Colonies grow on agar surface for identification |
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Differential Medium |
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Used to increase the numbers of a small minority of microorganisms in a mixed culture to arrive at a detectable level of microorganisms |
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Lyophilization |
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Preservation method that uses quick-freezing and a high vacuum |
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Colonies |
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Accumulations of microbes large enough to see without a microscope |
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Inoculum |
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Microbes added to initiate growth |
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BSL-3 |
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Usual laboratory designation for safe handling of tuberculosis |
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BSL-4 |
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Laboratory designation for the most dangerous microorganisms; personnel wear "space suits" |
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BSL-1 |
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A routine microbiology teaching laboratory would be designated this |
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Stationary phase |
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New cell numbers balanced by death of cells |
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Lag Phase |
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No cell division, but intense metabolic activity |
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Log Phase |
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A logarithmic plot of the population produces an ascending straight line |
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Reducing Media |
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Used to grow obligate anaerobes; generally contain ingredients such as sodium thioglycolate that chemically combine with dissolved oxygen |
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Selective Media |
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Designed to suppress the growth of unwanted bacteria and to encourage growth of desired microbes |
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Complex Media |
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Nutrients are digests or extracts; exact chemical composition varies slightly from batch to batch |
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Polysaccharide |
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Agar is a derived from a marine alga. |
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cyanobacteria |
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A few bacteria and the photosynthesizing are able to use gaseous nitrogen directly from the atmosphere |
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Mesophiles |
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The most common microbes; their optimum growth temperatures are 25-40°C |
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Nutrient broth |
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A complex medium in liquid form |
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Absorbance (OD) |
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How turbidity is usually recorded in a spectrophotometer |
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Dry weight measurement |
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How the growth of filamentous bacteria is usually recorded |
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Facultative anaerobes |
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Grow more efficiently aerobically than they do anaerobically |
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Facultative halophiles |
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do not require high salt concentrations, but they are able to grow at salt concentrations that may inhibit the growth of many other bacteria. |
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Phsophate salts, amino acids, and peptones |
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are examples of buffers found in complex media |
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Culture Medium |
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Any nutrient material prepared fro the growth of bacteria in a laboratory |
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Agar |
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melts at about the boiling point of water but remains liquid until the temperature drops to about 40°C |
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Pour plate method |
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Dilutions of a bacterial mixture are poured into a Petri dish and mixed with melted agar; this is a plate counting method. |
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Peptones |
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Partially digested protein products that are used in complex media |
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Living host cells |
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Usually necessary to grow obligate intracellular parasites such as rickettsias and chlamydias |
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Reduction |
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The general term for tests that estimate microbial growth by the time required for them to deplete oxygen in the medium is tests. |
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Colony-forming Unit |
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When a single colony arises from a clump a bacteria, it is recorded as a(n) . |