When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Antibiotic sensitivity testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antibiotic_sensitivity_testing

    Antibiotic resistance tests: Bacteria are streaked on dishes with white disks, each impregnated with a different antibiotic. Clear rings, such as those on the left, show that bacteria have not grown—indicating that these bacteria are not resistant. The bacteria on the right are fully resistant to all but two of the seven antibiotics tested. [33]

  3. Zoospore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoospore

    Heterokont zoospore of Saprolegnia with tinsel and whiplash flagella. A zoospore is a motile asexual spore that uses a flagellum for locomotion in aqueous or moist environments. [1] Also called a swarm spore, these spores are created by some protists, bacteria, and fungi to propagate themselves.

  4. Zygospore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zygospore

    A zygospore is a diploid reproductive stage in the life cycle of many fungi and protists.Zygospores are created by the nuclear fusion of haploid cells. In fungi, zygospores are formed in zygosporangia after the fusion of specialized budding structures, from mycelia of the same (in homothallic fungi) or different mating types (in heterothallic fungi), and may be chlamydospores. [1]

  5. Phycomycetes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phycomycetes

    A zygospore is formed by fusion of two gametes. These gametes are similar in morphology ( isogamous ) or dissimilar ( anisogamous or oogamous ). The class Phycomycetes has been abolished and in its place exists Zygomycetes , Chytridiomycetes , Plasmodiophoromycetes , Hyphochytridiomycetes , Trichomycetes (including Harpellales , Asellariales ...

  6. Zygomycota - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zygomycota

    An immature zygosporangium of the Rhizopus fungus forming from two fused gametangia, showing a "yoke" shape.. The name Zygomycota refers to the zygosporangia characteristically formed by the members of this clade, in which resistant spherical spores are formed during sexual reproduction.

  7. Skin flora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skin_flora

    Skin flora is usually non-pathogenic, and either commensal (are not harmful to their host) or mutualistic (offer a benefit). The benefits bacteria can offer include preventing transient pathogenic organisms from colonizing the skin surface, either by competing for nutrients, secreting chemicals against them, or stimulating the skin's immune ...

  8. Mantoux test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantoux_test

    It is one of the major tuberculin skin tests used around the world, largely replacing multiple-puncture tests such as the tine test. The Heaf test, a form of tine test, was used until 2005 in the UK, when it was replaced by the Mantoux test. The Mantoux test is endorsed by the American Thoracic Society and Centers for Disease Control and ...

  9. Spore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spore

    The main difference between spores and seeds as dispersal units is that spores are unicellular, the first cell of a gametophyte, while seeds contain within them a developing embryo (the multicellular sporophyte of the next generation), produced by the fusion of the male gamete of the pollen tube with the female gamete formed by the ...