Agar plate
An agar plate is a sterile petri dish that contains agar, and is used to culture bacteria and fungi.
What should happen is that single bacteria get isolated by the streaking, and when the plate is incubated, the resulting colony will have started from just one bacterium.
Most plates are incubated at 37°C in 5% CO2, which is the temperature and conditions that most of the body's bacteria will grow. Special incubators can maintain these conditions.
Some bacteria must be incubated anaerobically (without an oxygen). These can be placed in containers, along with a substance that removes oxygen, and the tightly sealed container placed in the regular incubator.
Fungi, and some bacteria (e.g. Yersinia sp.) should be incubated slightly cooler. This is usually 30°C, and room air often is used.
Campylobacter is a difficult bacteria to grow. It needs special agar plates, plus its own microaerophilic environment.
Table of contents
1 Innoculation techniques
Innoculation techniques Streaking
The most common method of innoculating an agar plate is streaking.
Christmas tree
This is used for culture of urine. A small loop is dipped in the urine, and a single streak is made down the middle of the agar plate. Then the loop is swayed in and out going at through the streak multiple times at right-angles to the first streak.
Preparing a lawn
A lawn is often used for antibiotic sensitivity[?] testing.
Incubation of agar plates
Types of agar plates