Morphological Characteristics:
- Cell Shape: Cocci
- Arrangement: Staphylococcus (clusters)
- Size: small
- Spores: none
- Gram Stain: Gram-positive bacteria
- Motility: non-motile
- Capsules: none
- Special Stains: none
Cultural Characteristics
- Colonies: circular, opaque, cream colored, entire, rigid, and flat
- Nutrient agar: growth
- Blood agar: N/A
- Agar Slant: growth
- Nutrient Broth: growth
- Gelatin stab: non-motile, grows where pin is inserted
- Oxygen requirements: facultative aerobe
- Optimum temperature: 37 degrees Celsius
Physiological Characteristics
- Fermentation
- Glucose: Fermentation
- Lactose: Fermentation
- Sucrose: negative; no fermentation
- Mannitol: growth occurs; no fermentation
- MacConkey: no growth
- EMB: no growth
- Litmus: formation of an acid curd; litmus reduction
- Hydrolysis
- Gelatin Liquefaction: negative
- Starch: negative
- Casein: negative
- Fat: positive
- IMViC
- Indole: negative
- Methyl Red: positive for acid production and fermentation
- Voges-Proskauer: negative
- Citrate utilization: negative
- Nitrate reduction: positive
- Urease: positive
- Catalase: positive
- Oxidase: negative
- TSIA: acid slant with alkaline butt
- Litmus Milk
- Acid: ferments lactose into an acid
- Alkaline: none
- Coagulation: acid curd
- Reduction: reduces litmus
- Peptonization: N/A
- No change: N/A
Using these characteristics we were able to narrow down the identity of our bacteria through use of a flow chart.
- First, we identified that the bacteria was "Gram-positive."
- Then we identified it as cocci (not bacillus, etc.)
- After, we referred to the Catalase test. Because the test was positive, our bacteria is either from the Micrococcus spp. or Staphylococcus spp.
- Next we referred to our Mannitol test and recalled that we tested negative for fermentation. This narrowed the list to S. saprophyticus, S. epidermidis, M. luteus, and M. varians.
- Because there was no pigment surrounding our bacteria in the Mannitol test, we limited our list to S. epidermidis and S. saprophyticus.
- We are unable to identify our bacteria any further. To completely identify our bacteria a fructose test needs to be completed.