List Of Possibilities Possible species of Gram negative organisms Neisseria lactamica Pseudomonas aeruginosa Pseudomonas fluorescens Pseudomonas putida Alcaligenes faecalis Alcaligenes latus Aeromonas sobria Enterobacter aerogenes Enterobacter cloacae Serratia marcescans Serratia rubidaea Serratia liquefaciens Escherichia coli Klebsiella pneumoniae Klebsiella oxytoca Morganella morganii Salmonella enterica serogroup enteriditis Shigella flexneri Proteus vulgaris Proteus mirabilis
List Of Possibilities
Possible species of Gram negative organisms
Neisseria lactamica
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Pseudomonas fluorescens
Pseudomonas putida
Alcaligenes faecalis
Alcaligenes latus
Aeromonas sobria
Enterobacter aerogenes
Enterobacter cloacae
Serratia marcescans
Serratia rubidaea
Serratia liquefaciens
Escherichia coli
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Klebsiella oxytoca
Morganella morganii
Salmonella enterica serogroup enteriditis
Shigella flexneri
Proteus vulgaris
Proteus mirabilis
HINT: some of the above choices are strict aerobes and some are facultative anaerobes. This is helpful to first eliminate a set from your possibilities (look them up to figure this out)
HINT #2. At first eliminate the organisms that *cannot* do something your organism *can*. This means you have a positive test result and you eliminate those that are always negative for that result. That way you do not have to worry that you accidentally killed the unknown 14 before you inoculated it. You Do still need to be concerned that you interpreted the test results correctly and did not introduce a contaminant that has the ability you were testing while your true unknown 14 did not. This entire project requires good technique, logical analysis, and critical thinking.
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