single bacillus
single
No
Negative
Enterobacter cloacae, or Enterobacter asburiae, or Enterobacter amnigenus biogp. 2 Further tests are needed to determine which of these three species it is.
most citrobacter cells are surrounded by many flagella used to move about but a few are non motile
No
No
Negative
Enterobacter cloacae is a common species of Gram-negative and rod-shaped bacterium. It is motile, nonsporeforming and is 70% positive for urea.
Yes, enterobacter cloacae can successfully breakdown starches. The starch is first transformed into glucose during the breakdowns chemical change process.
Enterobacter cloacae, or Enterobacter asburiae, or Enterobacter amnigenus biogp. 2 Further tests are needed to determine which of these three species it is.
alpha-glucosidase test: using 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-alpha-D-glucopyranoside (included in chromogenic media), but not using alpha-methyl-glucoside fermentation. Cronobacter (E. sakazakii) are positive for this test and E. aerogenes are negative.
most citrobacter cells are surrounded by many flagella used to move about but a few are non motile
the previous answer of gram positive rods is incorrect the correct answer is gram negative rods
E. areogenes grows wet, grey colored colonies in non selective medium.
Enterobacter aerogenes are classified as coccobacillus, based on their cellular morphology. They are rod-shaped (bacillus), but short and almost spherical (coccus).
Stratified: I disagree with stratified, the answer is "simple" arrangement.
barrier