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The counting of surface colonies of bacteria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 May 2009

P. B. Crone
Affiliation:
From the Public Health Laboratory, Newcastle upon Tyne
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A colony count performed by spreading a known volume of suspension on the surface of a plate possesses certain advantages over other methods, of which the chief is ease of counting.

The distribution of counts of several samples of the same suspension on medium of the same age and batch is as expected on statistical grounds.

Different batches and ages of blood plates may give substantially the same count but this is not true for Leifson's and Wilson & Blair's media.

A diluting fluid, which is satisfactory if blood agar is the plating medium, may not necessarily be so if special media are to be used.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1948

References

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