No, not all bacteria grow on nutrient agar. Nutrient agar is considered one of the least selective agars but some bacteria are fastideous in their growth requirments. Microbiologists have gone to great lengths to get some bacteria to grow in the lab including using nine-banded armadillo foot pads to grow the bacteria Mycobacterium leprae which causes leprosy.
Some bacteria live in volcanoes which are acid, sulphurous and hot, they reduce the H2S to sulphur. They can live under the sea at high pressure or on top of mountains where it is cold, think of sammonella which lives in frozen chicken. Under the sea they are called black gushers, metal sulphides can be black, hence mineral extraction at sea, hopefully this will give you more ideas to come up with.
No because not all microorganism can be grow and give a colony.
No. While humans have designed several distinct agars to culture many kinds of microorganisms, it is currently understood that most microorganisms are currently not culturable.
Not the right food, anaerobic organisms are killed by oxygen, etc.
The purpose of a pour plate is to exam the bacteria in milk. It is used to find isolated bacteria colonies under anaerobic and aerobic environments.
Cuticle
No, it is a population of bacteria that grows from the cell or cells that landed on that spot on the plate.
Streptococcus pneuomoniae When this organism is tested on a blood agar plate it's colonies will be surrounded by a greenish discoloration due to alpha-hemolysis.
It is the area on an agar plate where growth of a control organism is prevented by an antibiotic usually placed on the agar surface. If the test organism is susceptable to the antibiotic, it will not grow where the antibioitic is.
Is a tectonic process where two plates ( an Oceanic plate and a Continental plate) collide. In Continental Arc environments the weaker oceanic plate always sub ducts under the stronger Continental plate. Most Continental arc environments lead to Volcano formation.
The purpose of a pour plate is to exam the bacteria in milk. It is used to find isolated bacteria colonies under anaerobic and aerobic environments.
It is because sponge is the thing that we use to wash our plate and sponge is not a living thing.....While animal is a living thing and it does not wash our plate....
The nail plate is produced by living skin cells ( specialized epithelial cells)
Usually in high temperature and high pressure environments associated with plate collisions and mountain building.
Volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, plate tectonics,
Cuticle
Land of the Living Skies
No, it is a population of bacteria that grows from the cell or cells that landed on that spot on the plate.
Streptococcus pneuomoniae When this organism is tested on a blood agar plate it's colonies will be surrounded by a greenish discoloration due to alpha-hemolysis.
It is the area on an agar plate where growth of a control organism is prevented by an antibiotic usually placed on the agar surface. If the test organism is susceptable to the antibiotic, it will not grow where the antibioitic is.
yes it can becuz it can be able to isolate on different plates