red
Mycoplasma (Gram +), Hemophilus (Gram -), Klebsiella (Gram -), Legionella (Gram -) among many that cause pneumonia. Do have another in mind?
An orthachromic stain is used in microscopy. It remains the same colour regardless of what it is staining, unlike metachromic stains, that change colour.
which stain is used to colour chromosomes
it is based on the structure of the cell wall and how it reacts to the series of reagents applied to the cells.
Acidified phloroglucinol is used as a stain for the detection of lignin. If lignin is present, it will turn a bright red colour.
Both stain poorly with the Gram stain.However Mycoplasma has no cell wall while Mycobacterium has a thick cell wall of mycolic acids.
Mycoplasma (Gram +), Hemophilus (Gram -), Klebsiella (Gram -), Legionella (Gram -) among many that cause pneumonia. Do have another in mind?
An orthachromic stain is used in microscopy. It remains the same colour regardless of what it is staining, unlike metachromic stains, that change colour.
Wood stain is for sealing and emphasising the natural colour of wood
which stain is used to colour chromosomes
You would get the color grey
colour, stain, tint, tinge, pigment
answer 1: The colour in the wine is from soaking the skins of grapes in the juice during fermentation. It is not from the grapes, they are colourless. I suppose the colour is what makes it stain. answer 2: Spillling red wine on your shirt makes a red wine stain.. ^_^
it is based on the structure of the cell wall and how it reacts to the series of reagents applied to the cells.
Oil stain is for bringing out the colour in wood. -If you feel it needs a latex stain, just paint it over -I don't see the point.
Water or any liquid without colour
the acid rain melts the colour off of the copper and is left with a stain