microbiology$48617$ - significado y definición. Qué es microbiology$48617$
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Qué (quién) es microbiology$48617$ - definición

STUDY OF MICROSCOPIC ORGANISMS
Microbiological; Microbiological techniques; Rapid microbiology; Rapid Microbiology; MicroBiology; History of microbiology; Micro Biology; General microbiology
  • An [[agar plate]] streaked with [[microorganism]]s
  • Innovative [[laboratory glassware]] and experimental methods developed by [[Louis Pasteur]] and other biologists contributed to the young field of bacteriology in the late 19th century.
  • [[Antonie van Leeuwenhoek]] (1632–1723)
  • [[Avicenna]] postulated the existence of microorganisms.
  • brew]] [[beer]]
  • A university food microbiology laboratory
  • founder of virology]]
  • culture]], see, and describe a large array of [[microbial life]]. He actually measured the multiplication of the bugs. What is more amazing is that he published his discoveries. }}</ref>

Instruments used in microbiology         
  • An inoculation loop is used to transfer bacteria for microbiological culture.
  • Petri dish
  • Agar plate
  • Tuberculin syringe
  • Candle jar
SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENT USED FOR MICROBIOLOGY
Instruments used in Microbiology; Castaneda medium
Instruments used specially in microbiology include:Textbook of Microbiology by Prof. C P Baveja, Textbook of Microbiology by Ananthanarayan and Panikar,
Diagnostic microbiology         
  • Api20ne
  • right
STUDY OF MICROBIAL IDENTIFICATION
User:Procto53/sandbox; Diagnostic Microbiology; Bile solubility test; Phenylalanine deaminase test
Diagnostic microbiology is the study of microbial identification. Since the discovery of the germ theory of disease, scientists have been finding ways to harvest specific organisms.
Microbiology         
·add. ·noun The study of minute organisms, or microbes, as the bacteria.

Wikipedia

Microbiology

Microbiology (from Ancient Greek μῑκρος (mīkros) 'small', βίος (bíos) 'life', and -λογία (-logía) 'study of') is the scientific study of microorganisms, those being unicellular (single cell), multicellular (cell colony), or acellular (lacking cells). Microbiology encompasses numerous sub-disciplines including virology, bacteriology, protistology, mycology, immunology, and parasitology.

Eukaryotic microorganisms possess membrane-bound organelles and include fungi and protists, whereas prokaryotic organisms—all of which are microorganisms—are conventionally classified as lacking membrane-bound organelles and include Bacteria and Archaea. Microbiologists traditionally relied on culture, staining, and microscopy. However, less than 1% of the microorganisms present in common environments can be cultured in isolation using current means. Microbiologists often rely on molecular biology tools such as DNA sequence based identification, for example the 16S rRNA gene sequence used for bacteria identification.

Viruses have been variably classified as organisms, as they have been considered either as very simple microorganisms or very complex molecules. Prions, never considered as microorganisms, have been investigated by virologists, however, as the clinical effects traced to them were originally presumed due to chronic viral infections, and virologists took search—discovering "infectious proteins".

The existence of microorganisms was predicted many centuries before they were first observed, for example by the Jains in India and by Marcus Terentius Varro in ancient Rome. The first recorded microscope observation was of the fruiting bodies of moulds, by Robert Hooke in 1666, but the Jesuit priest Athanasius Kircher was likely the first to see microbes, which he mentioned observing in milk and putrid material in 1658. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek is considered a father of microbiology as he observed and experimented with microscopic organisms in the 1670s, using simple microscopes of his own design. Scientific microbiology developed in the 19th century through the work of Louis Pasteur and in medical microbiology Robert Koch.