9
Growth of Microorganisms The Growth Curve

Growth Of Microorganisms

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: Growth Of Microorganisms

Growth of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

Page 2: Growth Of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

Page 3: Growth Of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

Page 4: Growth Of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

• A plot of log10 (number of organisms) against time for a growing culture results in a predictable pattern.

• The log value is used as it is easier to plot onto a graph.

Page 5: Growth Of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

• Lag phase• Short period immediately after inoculation• Organisms are synthesising the enzymes needed

to exploit the new medium.• Cells may grow in size but not usually in number• (If organisms have been transferred from an

identical medium, at the same temperature, the lag phase may be very short).

Page 6: Growth Of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

• Exponential phase (log phase)

• Organisms have started to reproduce

• Abundant food, absence of competition and of inhibiting factors such as toxic waste products allows cell division to occur at a high rate.

• The population doubles at regular intervals.

Page 7: Growth Of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

• Plotted as arithmetic numbers of cells, the log phase would be a curve of ever increasing gradient; plotted as log10 of cell numbers, it gives a straight line.

Page 8: Growth Of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

Stationary phase• In a closed culture food soon runs out or

the organisms become poisoned by their own accumulated wastes

• As a results growth slows down and stops.• If the population is being measured by a

total cell count, or by turbidity readings, there may be no apparent further change.

Page 9: Growth Of Microorganisms

The Growth Curve

• Death phase

• A viable count will soon show a decline in cell numbers as cells die

• This will continue until there are no living cells left..