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Brilliant Green Bile Agar 500g – Ausamics professional microbiology series.

Brilliant Green Bile Agar (BGBA) AS‑1151 | Selective Medium for Coliform Detection

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Light-Sensitive Medium — Prepare Fresh; Store in Dark
Brilliant Green Bile Agar is highly sensitive to light, especially direct sunlight. Light exposure causes colour change (deep blue → purple or red) and reduces productivity. Prepare medium immediately before use. If storage is necessary, keep prepared plates in sealed dark bags at 2–8°C for no longer than 48 hours. Store dehydrated powder at 10–30°C away from light.
AuSaMicS Life Science • Water & Food Safety Media

Brilliant Green Bile Agar (BGBA)

Selective & Differential Agar for Coliform Enumeration in Water, Food & Dairy

APHA-approved selective-differential medium for direct enumeration of coliform bacteria from water, wastewater, sewage, food, and dairy samples. Dual selectivity via oxgall (bile) + brilliant green dye; distinctive deep red colonies with pink halo on a blue background enable unambiguous coliform identification — no confirmation reagents required.

AS-1151 pH 7.2 ± 0.2 ✓ Australian Stock 💧 Water & Wastewater 🍽️ Food & Dairy 📊 APHA Standard Methods
🚀 Same-Day Dispatch: Melbourne Stock 🔵🔴 Dual Indicator: Erioglaucine + Basic Fuchsin ☀️ Light Sensitive: Prepare fresh, store in dark

🏆 Coliform Detection at a Glance

🔵 Background — Blue (neutral pH, erioglaucine)
🔴 Coliform colonies — Deep red + pink halo
Non-coliforms — Colourless / faint pink
🚫 Gram-positives — Inhibited by bile + BG dye
📋 Full Documentation — COA + SDS + TDS
APHA Approved — Since 1935
Standard Methods for Water & Wastewater + APHA Compendium of Foods

⚠️ BGBA (AS-1151) vs Brilliant Green Agar (BGA) — Two Different Media

Brilliant Green Bile Agar — BGBA (AS-1151) ← You are here
Contains oxgall (bile) + brilliant green + erioglaucine + basic fuchsin. Designed for coliform enumeration in water and food. Blue background; red coliform colonies. APHA Standard Methods. Double-strength for 10 mL water sample volumes.
Brilliant Green Agar — BGA (Salmonella medium)
Contains brilliant green + phenol red ± sucrose/lactose. Designed for Salmonella selective isolation from food and faeces. Pink-red medium; Salmonella = colourless colonies. Recommended by APHA, FDA, EP, BP, USP for Salmonella detection.

🔬 Technical Overview & Biochemistry

Brilliant Green Bile Agar was originally formulated by Nobel and Tonney (1935) for the enumeration of coliform bacteria from water and materials of sanitary importance. It was subsequently approved by the American Public Health Association (APHA) for coliform estimation across a broad range of sample types — a standard that has endured for nearly 90 years. The medium achieves its remarkable selectivity through a dual inhibitory system:

Oxgall (Dehydrated Ox Bile)
Bile acids (deoxycholic acid, cholic acid, chenodeoxycholic acid) disrupt the lipid bilayer and peptidoglycan of Gram-positive bacteria by acting as detergents. Also inhibits many Gram-negative non-coliform species sensitive to bile salts — particularly anaerobes and fastidious organisms.
Brilliant Green Dye
Triarylmethane dye that inhibits Gram-positive bacteria by binding to and disrupting cell wall and membrane components. Together with bile, eliminates virtually all non-coliform competition while coliforms (inherently resistant to both agents) grow freely.

The dual pH indicator system is what makes BGBA distinctively differentiate coliforms from the few resistant non-coliforms:

Medium at neutral pH 🔵
Blue background
(erioglaucine dominant)
Coliforms (lactose fermenters) 🔴
Deep red colony + pink halo
(basic fuchsin + acid production)
Non-coliforms
Colourless to faint pink
(no acid; no indicator shift)
Biochemistry of the colour reaction: Coliform bacteria ferment lactose via heterofermentative glycolysis, producing organic acids (primarily lactic, acetic, formic acids) that drop the local pH below the transition point of basic fuchsin. Basic fuchsin (a rosaniline dye) forms a deep red-pink precipitate at acidic pH, creating the characteristic red colony with pink diffusion halo. Erioglaucine (FD&C Blue No. 1) remains blue at neutral-alkaline pH, providing the contrasting blue background that makes red coliform colonies immediately conspicuous.

🧪 Detailed Ingredients Table

Ingredient Typical g/L Function Mechanism & Significance
Gelatin Peptone 10.0 Nitrogen, carbon, amino acids, vitamins Enzymatic hydrolysate of gelatin providing nitrogen, amino acids, and growth factors. Supports the growth of coliform bacteria including the full coli-aerogenes group (E. coli, Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Citrobacter) at low inoculum densities typical of water samples. Supplies nutrients without introducing inhibitory substances.
Lactose 10.0 Fermentable carbohydrate — coliform diagnostic substrate The defining diagnostic substrate: coliforms (defined as Gram-negative, non-spore-forming, facultative anaerobic rods that ferment lactose with acid and gas within 48 h at 35°C) produce acids from lactose via the β-galactosidase pathway. The acid production drops local pH, triggering the basic fuchsin colour change from colourless to deep red around each fermenting colony. Non-coliforms that cannot ferment lactose produce no acid and no colour change.
Oxgall (Dehydrated Ox Bile) 2.0 Primary selective agent — Gram-positive & non-coliform inhibitor Dehydrated natural ox bile containing bile acids (deoxycholic, cholic, chenodeoxycholic, ursodeoxycholic acids) and bile salts. Acts as a detergent — disrupts Gram-positive cell membranes and inhibits lactose-fermenting Clostridia (critical for preventing false positives in sewage/faecal samples). Also inhibits bile-sensitive Gram-negative non-coliforms. Coliforms are inherently bile-resistant, having evolved in the gut environment.
Brilliant Green Dye 0.0133 Secondary selective agent — Gram-positive inhibitor Triarylmethane dye (tetra-ethyl-diamino-triphenyl-carbinol oxalate) that inhibits Gram-positive bacteria at trace concentrations by disrupting cell wall synthesis and membrane integrity. Working synergistically with oxgall, the combined selectivity eliminates virtually all potential false-positive organisms including lactose-fermenting Clostridia and Gram-positive cocci that would otherwise produce interfering acid/gas. CRITICAL: Even trace light exposure degrades brilliant green, reducing selectivity and creating false colour.
Basic Fuchsin (Acid Fuchsin) 0.1 pH indicator — acid signal (coliform fermentation) Rosaniline-based dye (paramagenta / basic fuchsin) that is colourless/pale at neutral-alkaline pH but forms an intense deep red-pink precipitate in acidic conditions. When coliform bacteria ferment lactose to organic acids, the local pH around the colony drops, triggering basic fuchsin to form the characteristic deep red colony with a diffuse pink halo that identifies coliforms on BGBA.
Erioglaucine (FD&C Blue No. 1) 0.033 Background pH indicator — neutral/alkaline signal Brilliant blue triphenylmethane dye that is intensely blue at neutral-to-alkaline pH. Provides the distinctive blue background of BGBA that makes deep red coliform colonies immediately visible by colour contrast. At acidic pH, erioglaucine colour intensity diminishes as basic fuchsin dominates — the combined colour-switch system (blue → red) is the defining feature of BGBA's readability.
Monopotassium Phosphate (KH₂PO₄) 0.5 Buffering agent Phosphate buffer maintains the initial medium pH at 7.2 ± 0.2, establishing the baseline blue erioglaucine colour. Critical for ensuring that spontaneous pH drift during preparation or storage does not create false-positive colour change before inoculation. Phosphate also provides the P component of microbial phospholipid synthesis.
Bacteriological Agar 12.0–15.0 Solidifying agent High-grade bacteriological agar providing the solid matrix for discrete colony formation. Localises the pH indicator colour change to the immediate vicinity of each fermenting colony, creating the sharp red halo/colony pattern. The porous agar matrix allows diffusion of acid metabolites outward from the colony, generating the characteristic pink diffusion zone around deep red coliform colonies.
Total (approx.) ~35 g/L Final pH 7.2 ± 0.2 at 25°C | Prepared: deep blue, slightly opalescent firm agar | Powder: pinkish-purple to light purple, free-flowing

📊 Comparative Coliform & Water Testing Media

Medium Target Indicator System Key Standard Pros / Cons
BGBA (AS-1151) ★ Total coliforms — water, food, dairy 🔵 Blue BG + 🔴 Red BF; deep red coliform colonies on blue background APHA Standard Methods; APHA Compendium Foods ✓ Visually striking; unambiguous red-on-blue readout
✓ Dual selectivity; suppresses Clostridia
✗ Light sensitive; prepare fresh
Nutrient Agar + MUG (AS-1308) E. coli specific (β-glucuronidase) 💙 Fluorogenic (365 nm UV); MUG hydrolysis ISO 9308-1; APHA Standard Methods ✓ Specific for E. coli; UV visualisation
✗ UV lamp required; no total coliform distinction
m-FC Agar (AS-1405) Faecal coliforms (thermotolerant 44.5°C) 🔵 Blue colonies (rosolic acid indicator) APHA Standard Methods (membrane filtration) ✓ Membrane filtration for faecal coliforms
✗ 44.5°C incubation required; not total coliforms
MacConkey Agar Enterobacteriaceae; coliforms isolation 🔴 Pink/red (lactose fermenter) vs colourless ISO 21528-1; general purpose ✓ General Gram-negative isolation
✗ Less selective than BGBA; not APHA water standard
VRBG Agar (AS-1376) Enterobacteriaceae enumeration (food) 🔴 Dark red/pink colonies + precipitate halo ISO 21528-2; food testing ✓ ISO 21528 food Enterobacteriaceae standard
✗ Broader target than coliforms; not water standard
TGE Agar (AS-1360) Total plate count (water) None — colony count only APHA Standard Methods (total plate count) ✓ Total aerobic bacteria enumeration
✗ Not coliform specific; no indicator
Lauryl Tryptose Broth Total coliforms (MPN presumptive) Gas production in Durham tube APHA Standard Methods (MPN method) ✓ Standard MPN presumptive step
✗ Requires confirmation; broth format only

⚖️ Structured Pros & Cons Analysis

✅ Advantages

  • Unambiguous visual readout — deep red colonies on a blue background is one of the most visually distinct colony-indicator systems in all of environmental microbiology; minimises subjective interpretation errors
  • APHA-approved for 90 years — included in Standard Methods for Water and Wastewater and the APHA Compendium of Methods for the Microbiological Examination of Foods; accepted globally for regulatory-compliant coliform enumeration
  • Dual selectivity — oxgall + brilliant green is superior to single-inhibitor media; specifically suppresses lactose-fermenting Clostridia that cause false positives in sewage and faecal samples on less selective media
  • Direct plating capability — suitable for direct plating of water and food samples without enrichment step; pour plate method most common
  • Double-strength formulation — can be prepared at 2× concentration to accommodate 10 mL water sample volumes while maintaining selective inhibitor concentrations
  • Multi-matrix validated — water, wastewater, sewage, food, dairy, and materials of sanitary importance all tested and validated by APHA methodology

⚠️ Limitations

  • Highly light-sensitive — the most critical limitation; brilliant green degrades rapidly on direct light exposure, causing medium colour change (blue→purple/red) and loss of selectivity; false-positive results possible if plates are exposed to light
  • Short prepared-plate shelf life — must be used within 48 h of preparation; cannot be stockpiled; pour plates fresh before each testing run
  • Non-differentiating within coliform group — cannot distinguish total coliforms from faecal coliforms or E. coli specifically; complementary use with MUG agar (AS-1308) or m-FC agar (AS-1405) required for faecal coliform/E. coli confirmation
  • Some gram-positive spore formers may break through — rare high-inoculum samples can overcome bile + BG inhibition if food matrix weakens inhibitor concentrations; Gram-positive spore formers may produce interfering colonies
  • Overheating degrades indicators — excessive autoclaving or re-melting degrades brilliant green and fuchsin indicators; prepare only once and pour immediately

🧬 Applications

💧 Drinking Water & Source Water Testing

Primary application: direct coliform enumeration from treated drinking water, raw source water (rivers, lakes, bores), and rainwater tanks per APHA Standard Methods. Prepare medium at single strength (35 g/L) for 1 mL samples via pour plate method. For 10 mL sample volumes, prepare at double strength to maintain inhibitor concentrations. Results directly reportable as total coliforms per 100 mL. Complement with m-FC Agar (AS-1405) for faecal coliform count and MUG Agar (AS-1308) for E. coli specific detection.

🏭 Wastewater & Sewage Monitoring

Standard medium for total coliform enumeration in raw sewage, treated effluent, and wastewater treatment plant process monitoring. The enhanced selectivity of the dual bile + brilliant green system is critical in wastewater applications where high densities of Gram-positive spore formers (Clostridium spp.) would produce false positives on less selective media. Works alongside TGE Agar (AS-1360) for total heterotrophic plate count.

🍽️ Food Safety Coliform Testing

APHA Compendium-referenced medium for total coliform enumeration in food products including fresh produce, ready-to-eat foods, processed meats, and environmental surface samples from food processing facilities. Used in conjunction with VRBG Agar (AS-1376) for Enterobacteriaceae counts and Glucose BCP Agar (AS-1240) for glucose fermentation confirmation of presumptive Enterobacteriaceae isolates.

🥛 Dairy Product Quality Control

Coliform enumeration in raw milk, pasteurised milk, cream, yoghurt, cheese, and powdered dairy products. High coliform counts in dairy indicate post-pasteurisation contamination, inadequate temperature control, or faecal contamination of raw milk. Use alongside Plate Count Skim Milk Agar (AS-1329) for total aerobic count and Letheen Broth Modified (AS-1271) for samples with residual sanitiser.

Additional Applications:

  • Recreational Water Monitoring: Swimming pools, spa pools, natural bathing waters, coastal waters — coliform counts for public health compliance
  • Irrigation Water: Agricultural water quality testing for food safety compliance (FSANZ, SFA, USDA HACCP)
  • Environmental Surface Sampling: Swab/rinse samples from food contact surfaces, equipment, and processing environments post-sanitation
  • Hospital & Healthcare Water: Water quality monitoring in clinical settings (cooling towers, dialysis water, endoscopy unit water)
  • Pharmaceutical Water QC: Purified water and water-for-injection microbial monitoring alongside Plate Count Skim Milk Agar (AS-1329)
  • MPN Confirmation: Confirmation plating from positive presumptive Lauryl Tryptose Broth MPN tubes in coliform enumeration workflows

🔎 Colony Appearance & Interpretation Guide

Organism / Group Colony Colour Halo Interpretation Confirmation Step
Escherichia coli 🔴 Deep red Pink halo Presumptive coliform — strong lactose fermenter; large deep red colonies with prominent halo. Count as confirmed coliform. MUG Agar (AS-1308) for E. coli confirmation; IMViC biochemical tests
Klebsiella / Enterobacter spp. 🔴 Deep red Pink halo Presumptive coliforms — typically form mucoid red colonies. Count as confirmed coliform. Differentiate from faecal coliforms by 44.5°C tolerance. m-FC Agar (AS-1405) at 44.5°C for faecal coliform distinction
Citrobacter / Serratia spp. 🔴 Red to pink-red Faint pink Weaker lactose fermenters — smaller, less intensely red colonies. Count as presumptive coliforms. Glucose BCP Agar (AS-1240) for fermentation confirmation
Salmonella / Shigella spp. ⚪ Colourless / pale None Non-lactose fermenters — grow as colourless to pale colonies if not inhibited. Do NOT count as coliforms. Subculture to XLD Agar or SS Agar for Salmonella/Shigella confirmation
Gram-positive bacteria ✗ Inhibited Staphylococci, Streptococci, Bacillus spp., Clostridia — effectively suppressed by oxgall + brilliant green.
Pseudomonas spp. ⚪ Colourless / inhibited None / minimal Most strains inhibited or form pale, colourless colonies. Oxidase positive — easily distinguished from coliforms (oxidase negative). Oxidase test to exclude from coliform count

💡 Double-Strength (2×) Preparation for 10 mL Water Samples

When testing 10 mL water samples using the pour plate method, standard-strength BGBA would be over-diluted by the large sample volume, reducing selective inhibitor concentrations below effective levels. The standard solution is to prepare BGBA at double strength:

Standard strength (1×):
Suspend ~35 g/L. Pour 15 mL agar, add 1 mL water sample. Final volume ≈ 16 mL per plate. Inhibitor concentrations maintained.
Double strength (2×) for 10 mL volumes:
Suspend ~70 g/L. Pour 10 mL double-strength agar + 10 mL water sample per plate. Final = 1× concentration throughout — inhibitors maintained despite high dilution ratio.

💡 Preparation & Protocol Guidelines

Preparation:
Suspend ~35 g/L (1×) or ~70 g/L (2×). Heat to boiling with constant stirring until dissolved. DO NOT overheat or re-autoclave — degrades indicators. Autoclave 121°C/15 min. Cool to 45–50°C in the DARK. Pour immediately.
Inoculation method:
Pour plate: add sample to empty plate, pour 15 mL cooled medium, swirl. Alternatively spread plate method. For MPN confirmation: streak from positive Lauryl Tryptose Broth tubes.
Incubation:
35 ± 0.5°C, aerobic, 24 ± 2 h. Extend to 48 ± 3 h for slow lactose fermenters. Keep plates in dark during incubation — do not expose to direct light.
Result reading:
Count all deep red colonies with pink halos as confirmed coliforms. Report as CFU per mL or per 100 mL. Colourless, pale, or blue colonies are not coliforms.
⚠️ Critical light sensitivity notes: (1) Protect medium from light throughout preparation and storage. (2) Never expose BGBA plates to direct sunlight — even brief exposure changes colour from blue to purple/red, indicating degradation and reduced selectivity. (3) If prepared plates appear purple or red before inoculation, discard — they are compromised. (4) Ideally, pour plates and use on the same day.

📋 Technical Specifications

Catalogue Number AS-1151
Common Name Brilliant Green Bile Agar (BGBA)
Synonyms BGB Agar; Noble & Tonney Agar; Coliform Enumeration Agar
pH (25°C) 7.2 ± 0.2
Suspension Rate (1×) ~35 g/L (approx. 28 L per kg)
Suspension Rate (2×) ~70 g/L (for 10 mL sample volumes)
Appearance (powder) Pinkish-purple to light purple, free-flowing homogeneous powder
Appearance (prepared) Deep blue, slightly opalescent firm agar — MUST be blue before use
Sterilisation Autoclave 121°C, 15 min — DO NOT re-autoclave; DO NOT overheat
Incubation 35 ± 0.5°C, aerobic, 24–48 h
Light Sensitivity CRITICAL — protect from all direct light throughout
Storage (powder) 10–30°C, dry, away from light
Storage (prepared plates) 2–8°C in dark ≤48 h; prefer same-day use
Available Sizes 100 g, 500 g, 5 kg

📜 Regulatory & Standards Compliance

  • APHA Standard Methods for Examination of Water and Wastewater (24th Ed., 2023) — coliform enumeration by pour plate method
  • APHA Compendium of Methods for Microbiological Examination of Foods (5th Ed., 2015) — food coliform enumeration
  • AOAC Official Methods of Analysis — sanitary quality testing
  • Australian Drinking Water Guidelines (NHMRC) — compatible with coliform testing requirements for drinking water quality assessment
  • FSANZ / DAFF — food safety coliform monitoring in food businesses and food-processing environments

🧫 Quality Control Organisms

Organism ATCC Growth Colony Colour
Escherichia coli 25922 ✓ Good 🔴 Deep red + pink halo
Klebsiella pneumoniae 13883 ✓ Good 🔴 Deep red, mucoid
Staphylococcus aureus 6538 ✗ Inhibited No growth
Enterococcus faecalis 29212 ✗ Inhibited No growth
Salmonella typhimurium 14028 ± Partial ⚪ Colourless (non-fermenter)
QC inoculum ≤100 CFU per strain | Incubation: 35°C, 24–48 h, aerobic, in dark

🔄 Cross-Reference / Equivalent Products

Supplier Product Name Cat. No.
Sigma-Aldrich Brilliant Green Bile Agar B1802
HiMedia Brilliant Green Bile Agar M059
Oxoid Brilliant Green Bile Agar CM0303
BD Difco Brilliant Green Bile Agar 232850
AuSaMicS AS-1151 — Australian manufactured, same-week dispatch, same-day Melbourne dispatch available

✅ Quality Assurance

  • pH Verified: 7.2 ± 0.2 per lot
  • Growth & Colour: E. coli ATCC 25922 — deep red + pink halo confirmed per batch
  • Selectivity: S. aureus ATCC 6538 and E. faecalis ATCC 29212 inhibition confirmed
  • Indicator Stability: Prepared medium colour verified (deep blue; not purple or red)
  • Sterility: Pre-release sterility check per lot
  • COA Issued: Certificate of Analysis with every order

📚 Key Literature References

  • Nobel W.C. & Tonney F.O. (1935). J. Am. Waterworks Assoc., 27:108. — Original formulation of Brilliant Green Bile Agar for coliform enumeration from water.
  • Lipps W.C. et al. (Eds.) (2023). Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater, 24th Ed. APHA Press. — Current APHA standard reference for BGBA methodology in water testing.
  • Salfinger Y. & Tortorello M.L. (Eds.) (2015). Compendium of Methods for the Microbiological Examination of Foods, 5th Ed. APHA. — BGBA reference for food coliform testing.
  • McCrady M.H. & Langerin J. (1932). J. Dairy Science, 15:321. — Foundational reference on bile/brilliant green selectivity for coliforms; referenced in original BGBA formulation papers.

💧 Complete Water, Food & Environmental Microbiology System

BGBA works best as part of a comprehensive testing system. Use these companion AuSaMicS products for a complete coliform, indicator organism, and food safety workflow.

💧 Water Testing Media Panel

Nutrient Agar + MUG (AS-1308)

E. coli specific — UV fluorescence

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m-FC Agar (AS-1405)

Faecal coliforms — membrane filtration

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TGE Agar (AS-1360)

Total plate count — water & dairy

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Yeast Extract Agar (AS-1379)

Yeast & mould enumeration

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🍽️ Food Safety Indicator Organism Panel

VRBG Agar (AS-1376)

Enterobacteriaceae — ISO 21528-2

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Glucose BCP Agar (AS-1240)

Glucose fermentation — ISO 21258

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Plate Count Skim Milk Agar (AS-1329)

Total aerobic count — dairy & food

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mCCDA Agar (AS-1294)

Campylobacter isolation — food & clinical

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🦠 Pathogen Detection & Confirmation Panel

MYP Agar (AS-1303)

B. cereus selective — ISO 7932

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Letheen Broth Modified (AS-1271)

Neutralising enrichment — cosmetics & pharma

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Rappaport Vassiliadis Broth (AS-1338)

Salmonella selective enrichment

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Glucose Yeast Extract Agar (AS-1241)

Spore former isolation — EN 13704

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🧪 Enrichment, Diluent & Pre-enrichment Broths

Buffered Peptone Water

ISO pre-enrichment diluent — food testing

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Lauryl Tryptose Broth

MPN presumptive coliform step

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Phenol Red Broth Base (AS-1326)

Carbohydrate fermentation profiling

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BCP Azide Broth (AS-1154)

Enterococcus selective enrichment

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Need Water Testing or Food Safety Protocol Support?

Our microbiologists can assist with APHA Standard Methods workflows, coliform enumeration protocols, double-strength preparation techniques, and building a complete water or food safety testing panel

For laboratory, research, and industrial use only. Not for food, feed, household, cosmetic, therapeutic, or personal use.
AuSaMicS Pty Ltd • ABN: 56 676 640 467 • 31 Longview CT, Thomastown, VIC 3074, Australia
Same-day dispatch • Australian stock • Full documentation included

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