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Some flagellated speciels fail to produce flagella when grown under lab conditions

2007-03-05 05:11:34 · 2 answers · asked by Mel 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

Would you use a slant culture as a source of material for preparing a flagella stain? Explain

2007-03-05 05:12:30 · update #1

2 answers

a nutritive broth would probably work better. most bacteria grow well in trypticase soy broth, but facultative anaerobes prefer thioglycolate broth. then there are the more specific broths that work better for some species, ie enriched with specific nutritional requirements that some bugs need.
temp can also be a factor, as well as aerobic vs. anaerobic conditions.
read up on your bug, and find out what its requirements are, and go from there. if you baby it along, then you'll get your flagella, and successfully stain them. i think you can e-mail me, so if you wanna give me more details, i'll get back to you as soon as i can.

2007-03-05 10:54:57 · answer #1 · answered by bad guppy 5 · 0 0

To equate Catholicism as being the "real direction" because of the fact of Teresa is an assumption, neither does it negate the legitimacy of evangelical Christianity. there have been additionally different mystical communities and persons that the Catholic church denounced as being heretical. faith and non secular ideals could carry us to the residing God, even nevertheless it fairly is the dynamic man or woman religious courting with Him, inspite of those ideals, for which Jesus Christ died and familiar a sparkling covenant for us all. that's what Teresa, John and others have got here upon... and what we each and each can could desire to boot. To God be the vast distinction.

2016-09-30 05:48:59 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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