Want this question answered?
An inoculating loop has a small circular ring at its tip and is used to collect cultures that are based in liquid. On the other hand, an inoculating needle can extract microorganisms from solid or dense material so they can be transferred to another location like a petri dish.
Inoculating loops are used to transfer microorganisms to growth media or for staining slides. They are an important part of the sterile technique as their use permits transfer only of the material of interest.
I've used glass herb shakers as test tubes successfully. they even withstand the pressure cooker. Have alook at http://www.socialist-federation.org/Improvised-Weapons/?page_id=126 they have some useful infomation.
Put agar jelly in a petri dish to sterilize the dish and then use something like a sterile inoculating loop to put the bacteria on the jelly. Then, seal the petri dish but make sure it is not airtight.
Streams(also rivers) come from seas and head into land and tend to make a loop.
A inoculating loop is used for transfers from culture plates to culture tubes instead of the inoculating needle because the needle could puncture the agar in tube. The loop is much easier as well to get liquid amount into the tube.
Because the solid media is more dense over a smaller area so a inoculating needle is used to retrieve the specimen. Where as for a liquid medium the specimen is more spread out over the liquid. The inoculating loop can collect more liquid because there is more metal present at the inoculating specimen retrieval point and has the ability to collect liquid in the loop. I'm currently taking general microbiology and my lab book hardly covers this. A.C.
An inoculating loop has a small circular ring at its tip and is used to collect cultures that are based in liquid. On the other hand, an inoculating needle can extract microorganisms from solid or dense material so they can be transferred to another location like a petri dish.
Pass the loop through a flame 2 or 3 times for about 10 seconds at a time.
Inoculating loops are used to transfer microorganisms to growth media or for staining slides. They are an important part of the sterile technique as their use permits transfer only of the material of interest.
The inoculating loop should be heated until it is hot enough to turn red, and then allowed to cool for a couple seconds. This ensures that the heat kills the majority of lingering bacteria before or after use.
The television show McGiver was about a young man that was great at taking everyday objects to make into other devices. When you make an improvised apparatus, you McGiver it.
One front is an increase stitch done this way: Pick up the horizontal strand with the left needle from front to back between the last stitch worked on the right needle and the next stitch to be worked on the left needle. Then, insert the right needle into the back of the loop, and knit it.
The more complicated method is to tear out the row and reknit the row. If you have knitted a few rows, and you see the project getting wider, knit two stitches together. Depending on the type of yarn, you may not even be able to see the mistake. Knitting two stitches together, may make an unveven, or hole appearance in the work, but it will prevent the project from getting wider.
To cast on stitches in knitting, make a slip knot, insert the needle into the loop, and tighten the knot on the needle. Then, wrap the yarn around the needle and pull a loop through the stitch on the needle. Repeat this process until you have the desired number of stitches on your needle.
Very, very carefully.
I'm not sure