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problems with agar-plates: tips - (Oct/19/2004 )

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Since the plates have some water on them, so after incubation, the microorganisms grow together or spread, and i cannot count!
that is bad.
i know if you can cool the plates down completely, it will be better.
how ever, it costs time!
can you give me a suggestion about how to plate quickly(cool down) and no water residue and no spreader problem?
thank you

-apple2004-

* Cool agar to 50-55 degrees before pouring your plates. This has the largest effect.

* Put an empty plate on top of the stack of poured plates to minimize condensation.

* Leave plates out overnight to evaporate, or put plates in the incubator for a few hours

* you can switch sterile plate tops with condensation with another empty sterile plate

I presume you are putting the plates into the incubator upside down, which will minimize the
moisture spreading cells during incubation.

-phage434-

Thank you Phage434, very usuful tips for the common problem.

-twister-

and one more, if you are in a hurry and have a good sterile hood: leave plates open in hood till dry (usually 10 to 30 minutes).

-leahf-

Thanks. However, I need to prepare hundreds of plates and that takes lots of time.......
Another question:
How long would you keep plates(prepared)?
in room temperature how long?
at referigerator how long?

-apple2004-

that could depend on the kind you are using...

Most kinds should be good for a few weeks at least whether kept at room temp or refrigerated. If the plate's gone bad you usually know it - it looks dry or contaminated.
refrigeration is especially important for rich plates (like LB), which become contaminated easily, or plates containing antibiotics which may break down (ampicillin especially is "famous" for this).

-leahf-

Pour plates, allow to cool to set up, invert overnight at room temp. Then store inverted in slevees.

-GeorgeWolff-

phage434 on Oct 20 2004, 05:17 AM said:

* Cool agar to 50-55 degrees before pouring your plates. This has the largest effect.

* Leave plates out overnight to evaporate, or put plates in the incubator for a few hours

I presume you are putting the plates into the incubator upside down, which will minimize the
moisture spreading cells during incubation.



GeorgeWolff on Jan 28 2009, 04:45 PM said:

Pour plates, allow to cool to set up, invert overnight at room temp. Then store inverted in slevees.


incubate inverted at 37°C for some hours. Cool down slowly to storage temperature (i.e. 37 --> room temp --> 15-10°C --> 4°C) and THEN store in slevees, otherwise you will get condensed water on the plates again.

If you are storing the plates at 4°C: let them reach the incubation temperature before seeding microbes on them, better for you microbes growth, and condensed water on the agar surface can evaporate.

-gebirgsziege-

Quote 'Thanks. However, I need to prepare hundreds of plates and that takes lots of time.......'

This is why we don't bother when we pore the plates. We'll dry them in the hood for about 15-30 min. before we need them.
Works for us, goes pretty quickly and the best side, you don't have to bother to dry them before you store them. Since despite all the things we tried (all the suggestions here included) we still had condensation on some of the plates..

-Ddkb-

put the agar-plates in the super clean bench, turn on the air fan, blowing them for 30mins

-2009203043@njau.edu.cn-
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