The pour plate technique is the typical technique used to prepare plate count agars. Here, the inoculum is added to the molten agar before pouring the plate. The molten agar is cooled to about 45 degrees Celsius and is poured using a sterile method into a petri dish containing a specific diluted sample. From here, the plates are rotated to ensure the samples are uniformly mixing with the agar. Incubation of the plates is the next step and is carried out for about 3 days at 20 to 30 degrees Celsius.
Once a plate has been successfully prepared, plate count agar cells will grow into colonies which can be sufficiently isolated to determine the original cell type. The colony-forming unit (CFU) is an appropriate description of the colony's origin. In plate counts, colonies are counted, but the count is usually recorded in CFU. Due to the fact that colonies growing on plates may begin as either a single cell or a cluster of cells, CFU allows for a correct description of the cell density. The streak plate method2 helps identify the unknown microbe by producing individual colonies on an agar plate which allows for CFU method to be used:
Streak the mixed culture back and forth in the first quadrant (top left) of the agar plate. Do not cut the agar, simply scrape the top. Flame the loop to rid of culture residue. Wait for it to cool for the next quadrant.
1. "Plate Count Agar (PCA) - Culture Media". Microbe Notes. 2019-05-13. Retrieved 2021-12-06.
2. Aryal, Sagar (2021-07-08). "Streak Plate Method- Principle, Methods, Significance, Limitations". Microbe Notes. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
"Chapter P2. Plate Count Agar (PCA)", Handbook of Culture Media for Food and Water Microbiology, Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry, pp. 870–872, 2011, doi:10.1039/9781847551450-00870, retrieved 2021-12-10 https://dx.doi.org/10.1039/9781847551450-00870 ↩
Aryal, Sagar (2021-07-08). "Streak Plate Method- Principle, Methods, Significance, Limitations". Microbe Notes. Retrieved 2021-12-10. https://microbenotes.com/streak-plate-method-principle-methods-significance-limitations/ ↩