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Petri dish

Man looking at fungus inside of petri dishes
Petri dishes as an art medium. Here an arch is made of petri dishes filled with bioluminescent bacteria

A Petri dish is a shallow glass or plastic cylindrical dish that biologists use to culture microbes. It was named after the German bacteriologist Julius Richard Petri (1852-1921) who invented it in 1877 when working as an assistant to Robert Koch.

Usually, the dish is partially filled with warm liquid agar along with a particular mix of nutrients, salts and amino acids and, optionally, antibiotics, that match the metabolic needs of the microbe being studied (technically referred to as a "selective medium"). After the agar solidifies, the dish is ready to receive a microbe-laden sample (although to grow some microbes it is often necessary to apply the sample with the hot agar). Modern Petri dishes often have rings on the lids and bases which allow them to be stacked so that they do not slide off of one another.

As well as making agar plates, empty Petri dishes may be used to observe plant germination, or small animal behaviour.

Laboratory equipment
Agar plate | Aspirator | Bunsen burner | Calorimeter | Colorimeter | Centrifuge | Fume hood | Microscope | Microtiter plate | Plate reader | Spectrophotometer | Thermometer
Laboratory glassware
Beaker | Burette | Conical measure | Cuvette | Laboratory flasks ( Erlenmeyer flask | Florence flask | Volumetric flask | Buchner flask) | Gas syringe | Graduated cylinder | Pipette | Petri dish | Soxhlet extractor | Test tube | Watch glass | Buchner funnel







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