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Mircobiology Chapter 3

front 1

The Five I's of studying microorganisms include all of the following except
A. Inoculation
B. Incubation
C. Infection
D. Isolation
E. Identification

back 1

C

front 2

The term that refers to the purposeful addition of microorganisms into a laboratory nutrient medium
is
A. Isolation
B. Inoculation
C. Immunization
D. Infection
E. Contamination

back 2

B

front 3

The term that refers to the purposeful addition of microorganisms into a laboratory nutrient medium
is
A. Isolation
B. Inoculation
C. Immunization
D. Infection
E. Contamination

back 3

A

front 4

The correct microbiological term for the tiny sample of specimen that is put ino a nutrient medium in
order to produce a culture is the
A. Colony
B. Inoculum
C. Streak
D. Loop
E. None of the choices are correct

back 4

B

front 5

Which of the following is essential for into development of discrete, isolated colonies?
A. Broth medium
B. Differential medium
C. Selective medium
D. Solid medium
E. Assay medium

back 5

D

front 6

Which method often results in colonies developing down throughout the agar along with some colonies
on the surface?
A. Streak plate
B. Spread plate
C. Pour plate
D. All of the choices are correct
E. None of the choices are correct

back 6

C

front 7

What type of isolation technique is most effective for the majority of applications?
A. Pour plate
B. Streak plate
C. Spread plate
D. Loop dilution
E. Culture plate

back 7

B

front 8

Which of the following will result when 1% to 5% agar is added to nutrient broth, boiled and cooled?
A. A pure culture
B. A mixed culture
C. A solid medium
D. A liquid medium
E. A contaminated medium

back 8

C

front 9

Agar is an important component of media because
A. Bacteria require agar to grow
B. Agar inhibits mold growth
C. Agar provides a solid surface for bacterial growth
D. Agar prevents contamination
E. All of the choices are correct

back 9

C

front 10

The three physical forms of laboratory media are
A. Solid, liquid, gas
B. Solid, semisolid, liquid
C. Streak plate, pour plate, broth
D. Aerobic, anaerobic, micro aerobic
E. None of the choices are correct

back 10

B

front 11

Which of the following is not an inoculating tool?
A. Petri dish
B. Loop
C. Needle
D. Pipette
E. Swab

back 11

A

front 12

Agar is a complex polysaccharide that comes from a/an
A. Green plant
B. Fungus
C. Mold
D. Algae
E. Euglena

back 12

D

front 13

Which of the following is not a benefit of agar as a solid medium?
A. Flexibility
B. Holds moisture
C. Can be inoculated and poured at a temperature that is not harmful
D. Solid at room temperature
E. Is digested by most microbes

back 13

E

front 14

A nutrient medium that has all of its chemical components identified and their precise concentrations
known and reproducible, would be termed
A. Complex
B. Reducing
C. Enriched
D. Synthetic
E. None of the choices are correct

back 14

D

front 15

A nutrient medium that contains at least one ingredient that is NOT chemically definable would be
termed
A. Complex
B. Reducing
C. Enriched
D. Synthetic
E. None of the choices are correct

back 15

A

front 16

All of the following are examples of different types of microbiological media except
A. Broth
B. Enriched
C. Agar
D. Petri dish
E. Gel

back 16

D

front 17

A microbiologist inoculates Staphylococcus epidermidis and Escherichia coli into a culture medium.
Following incubation, only the E. coli grows in the culture. What is the most likely explanation?
A. The microbiologist used too much inoculum
B. The culture is contaminated
C. The incubation temperature was incorrect
D. The culture medium must be selective
E. The culture medium must be differential

back 17

D

front 18

A common medium used for growing fastidious bacteria is
A. Blood agar
B. Trypticase soy agar
C. Mannitol salt agar
D. MacConkey medium
E. A reducing medium

back 18

A

front 19

A reducing medium contains
A. Sugars that can be fermented
B. Extra oxygen
C. Hemoglobin, vitamins or other growth factors
D. Substances that remove oxygen
E. Inhibiting agents

back 19

D

front 20

Which type of medium is able to distinguish different species or types of microorganisms based on an
observable change in the colonies or in the medium?
A. Differential
B. Selective
C. Enumeration
D. Enriched
E. Reducing

back 20

A

front 21

A microbiologist decides to use a nutrient medium that contains thioglycollic acid. What type of microbe
is she attempting to culture?
A. Fastidious
B. Gram positive
C. Anaerobic
D. Gram negative
E. Aerobic

back 21

C

front 22

Differential media results in which of the following growth characteristics?
A. Different color colonies
B. Different media color post incubation
C. Precipitates
D. Gas bubbles
E. All of the choices are correct

back 22

E

front 23

A reducing media is used to culture
A. Fastidious organisms
B. Aerobic organisms
C. Anaerobic organisms
D. Any pathogenic organisms
E. None of the choices are correc

back 23

C

front 24

For which bacterial genus is mannitol salt agar selective?
A. Salmonella
B. Streptococcus
C. Neisseria
D. Staphylococcus
E. Escherichia

back 24

D

front 25

A microbiologist must culture a patient's feces for intestinal pathogens. Which of the following would
likely be present in selective media for analyzing this fecal specimen?
A. NaCl
B. Sheep red blood cells
C. Bile salts
D. Thioglycollic acid
E. Peptone

back 25

C

front 26

Bacteria that require special growth factors and complex nutrients are termed
A. Aerobic
B. Anaerobic
C. Fastidious
D. Microaerophilic
E. Autotrophic

back 26

C

front 27

A microbiologist inoculates Staphylococcus aureus into a culture medium. Following incubation, both
Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis are determined to be growing in this culture.
What is the most likely explanation?
A. The microbiologist used too much inoculum
B. The culture is contaminated
C. The incubation temperature was incorrect
D. The culture medium must be selective
E. The culture medium must be differential

back 27

D

front 28

What is the term for a culture made from one isolated colony?
A. Axenic
B. Mixed
C. Pure
D. Both axenic and mixed
E. Both axenic and pure

back 28

E

front 29

Newly inoculated cultures must be _____ at a specific temperature and time to encourage growth.
A. Streaked
B. Poured
C. Incubated
D. All of the choices are correct

back 29

C

front 30

The _____ of the microscope holds and allows selection of the objective lenses.
A. Stage
B. Condenser
C. Objective
D. Ocular
E. Nosepiece

back 30

E

front 31

which of the following will converge light rays to a single focal point on the specimen?
A. Ocular lens
B. Objective lens
C. Iris diaphragm
D. Condenser
E. Nosepiece

back 31

D

front 32

Which of the following magnifies the specimen to produce the real image of the specimen?
A. Condenser
B. Objective lens
C. Ocular lens
D. Body
E. Nosepiece

back 32

B

front 33

Which of the following magnifies the specimen to produce the virtual image of the specimen?
A. Objective lens
B. Ocular lens
C. Condenser
D. Body
E. Iris diaphragm

back 33

B

front 34

Which of the following controls the amount of light entering the specimen?
A. Objective lens
B. Ocular lens
C. Condenser
D. Body
E. Iris diaphragm

back 34

E

front 35

If a microbiologist is studying a specimen at a total magnification of 950X, what is the magnifying power
of the objective lens if the ocular lens is 10X?
A. 100X
B. 950X
C. 85X
D. 850X
E. 95X

back 35

E

front 36

Magnification is achieved in a compound microscope through the initial magnification of the specimen
by the _____ lens. This image is then projected to the _____ lens that will further magnify the specimen
to form a virtual image received by the eye.
A. Ocular, objective
B. Scanning, objective
C. Objective, ocular
D. Ocular, oil
E. None of the choices are correct

back 36

C

front 37

Which of the following characteristics refers to the microscope's ability to show two separate entities as
separate and distinct?
A. Resolving power
B. Magnification
C. Refraction
D. All of the choices are correct
E. None of the choices are correct

back 37

A

front 38

All of the following are diameters of cells that would be resolved in a microscope with a limit of
resolution of 0.2µm except
A. 0.2 µm
B. 0.2 mm
C. 0.1 µm
D. 0.3 µm
E. 2.0 µm

back 38

C

front 39

The wavelength of light used and the numerical aperture governs
A. Illumination
B. Resolution
C. Magnification
D. Size of the field
E. All of the choices are correct

back 39

B

front 40

_____ has the same optical qualities as glass and thus prevents refractive loss of light as it passes from the
slide to the objective lens.
A. The scanning objective
B. The oil objective
C. The slide
D. Immersion oil
E. The ocular

back 40

D

front 41

The type of microscope in which you would see brightly illuminated specimens against a black
background is
A. Bright-field
B. Dark-field
C. Phase-contrast
D. Fluorescence
E. Electron

back 41

B

front 42

Which type of microscope shows cells against a bright background and also shows intracellular structures
of unstained cells based on their varying densities?
A. Bright-field
B. Dark-field
C. Phase-contrast
D. Differential interference
E. Electron

back 42

C

front 43

Which type of microscope is the most widely used and shows cells against a bright background?
A. Bright-field
B. Dark-field
C. Phase-contrast
D. Fluorescence
E. Electron

back 43

A

front 44

All of the following pertain to the fluorescence microscope except
A. Uses electrons to produce a specimen image
B. Type of compound microscope
C. Requires the use of dyes like acridine and fluoresce in
D. Commonly used to diagnose certain infections
E. Requires an ultraviolet radiation source

back 44

A

front 45

A confocal scanning optical microscope
A. Uses ultraviolet light to form a specimen image
B. Shows three-dimensional cell images from the cell surface to the middle of the cell
C. Produces specimen images on electron micrographs
D. Uses dyes that emit visible light when bombarded by ultraviolet rays
E. Requires specimens to be stained

back 45

B

front 46

A confocal scanning optical microscope
A. Uses a laser beam of light to form a specimen image
B. Shows only the surface of the specimen
C. Produces specimen images on electron micrographs
D. Uses dyes that emit visible light when bombarded by ultraviolet rays
E. Requires specimens to be stained

back 46

A

front 47

Which type of microscope does not use light in forming the specimen image?
A. Bright-field
B. Dark-field
C. Phase-contrast
D. Fluorescence
E. Electron

back 47

E

front 48

Which type of microscope achieves the greatest resolution and highest magnification?
A. Bright-field
B. Dark-field
C. Phase-contrast
D. Fluorescence
E. Electron

back 48

E

front 49

Which type of microscope cannot image live specimens?
A. Bright-field
B. Phase-contrast
C. Dark-field
D. Tunneling electron
E. Differential interference

back 49

D

front 50

Which type of microscope bombards a whole, metal-coated specimen with electrons moving back and
forth over it?
A. Fluorescence
B. Differential interference contrast
C. Scanning electron
D. Transmission electron
E. Phase-contrast

back 50

C

front 51

The specimen preparation that is best for viewing cell motility is
A. Hanging drop
B. Fixed stained smear
C. Gram stain
D. Negative stain
E. Flagellar stain

back 51

A

front 52

The purpose of staining cells on a microscope slide is to
A. Kill them
B. Secure them to the slide
C. Enlarge the cells
D. Add contrast in order to see them better
E. See motility

back 52

D

front 53

The gram staining procedure is best described as a __staining technique.
A. acid fast or Ziehl-Neelson
B. differential
C. capsule
D. Schaefer-Fulton

back 53

B

front 54

What do the Gram stain, acid-fast stain and endospore stain have in common?
A. Used on a wet mount of the specimen
B. Use heat to force the dye into cell structures
C. Outcome based on cell wall differences
D. Use a negative stain technique
E. Are differential stains

back 54

C

front 55

Basic dyes are
A. Attracted to the acidic substances of bacterial cells
B. Anionic
C. Used in negative staining
D. Repelled by cells
E. Dyes such as India ink and nigrosin

back 55

A

front 56

A microbiologist makes a fixed smear of bacterial cells and stains them with Loeffler's methylene blue.
All the cells appear blue under the oil lens. This is an example of
A. Negative staining
B. Using an acidic dye
C. Simple staining
D. Using the acid-fast stain
E. Capsule staining

back 56

C

front 57

Matching.
1.) 1 Km A.) 10-2 cm
2.) 1 mm B.) 100 mm
3.) 10 cm C.) 10-6 m
4.) 1 m D.) 1000 m

back 57

1/D, 2/A, 3/B, 4/C

front 58

Who invented the first crude microscope by grinding glass?
A. Redi
B. Lister
C. Schultz & Schwann
D. Leeuwenhoek

back 58

D

front 59

Which type of media would be the best choice when shipping a sample of bacteria to a laboratory to be
tested from a satellite office site.
A. Transport
B. EMB
C. Blood
D. thioglycollate

back 59

A

front 60

The Gram staining procedure is best described as a __staining technique.
A. Acid fast or Ziehl-Neelson
B. Differential
C. Capsule
D. Schaefer-Fulton

back 60

B

front 61

The procedures for culturing a microorganism require the use of a microscope.
True False

back 61

False

front 62

A medium that is gel-like has less agar in it compared to a solid medium.
True False

back 62

True

front 63

Some microbes are not capable of growing on artificial media.
True False

back 63

True

front 64

A selective medium contains one or more substances that inhibit growth of certain microbes in order to
facilitate the growth of other microbes.
True False

back 64

True

front 65

One colony typically develops from the growth of several parent bacterial cells.
True False

back 65

False

front 66

Mixed cultures are also referred to as contaminated cultures.
True False

back 66

False

front 67

Bacterial cultures are easily identified from their microscopic appearance.
True False

back 67

False

front 68

Normal incubation temperatures range from 30° to 60° C.
True False

back 68

False

front 69

The bending of light rays as they pass from one medium to another is called refraction.
True False

back 69

True

front 70

The real image is the reverse of the actual specimen.
True False

back 70

False

front 71

A differential interference contrast microscope uses dyes to give colored three-dimensional images.
True False

back 71

False

front 72

Fixed smears of specimens are required in order to perform the Gram stain and endospore stain on the
specimens.
True False

back 72

True

front 73

At the end of the Gram stain, gram positive bacteria will be seen as pink cells.
True False

back 73

False