Orange Serum Agar
Orange Serum Agar
Reference Medium for Enumeration of Aciduric Spoilage Microorganisms
Product Identification
Chemical & Physical Information
Product Name: Orange Serum Agar
Medium Type: Selective solid culture medium
Form: Dehydrated powder
Product Description
Orange Serum Agar is the official reference solid culture medium for the enumeration and isolation of aciduric spoilage bacteria, yeasts, and moulds from citrus juices, fruit-based beverages, concentrates, syrups, and soft drinks. The formulation closely mimics the natural low-pH citrus environment, enabling reliable recovery of organisms that survive and proliferate in acidic products.
This medium is specified as the mandatory reference medium in ISO 13681, IFU Method No. 3, and international fruit-juice and beverage microbiology standards. It is routinely used for quality control testing in juice processing plants, beverage manufacturers, and contract microbiology laboratories.
Ausamics Orange Serum Agar is supplied as a high-quality dehydrated powder to ensure consistent selectivity, reproducible recovery, and reliable colony development.
Principle of the Medium
Functional Components
Orange Serum: Provides natural organic acids, sugars, and growth factors characteristic of citrus products
Yeast Extract: Supplies vitamins and growth factors
Tryptone / Peptone: Provides nitrogen, amino acids, and peptides
Glucose: Readily fermentable carbohydrate source
Dipotassium Phosphate (K₂HPO₄): Buffering component
Agar: Solidifying agent
The final acidic pH (approximately 5.5) is critical for selectivity and suppresses most non-aciduric background flora.
Typical Characteristics
Medium Properties
Appearance (dehydrated): Light beige to pale orange powder
Appearance (prepared): Amber to orange-tinted agar
pH (prepared medium): 5.5 ± 0.2 at 25 °C (critical)
Selectivity: Aciduric microorganisms
Differential: No
Composition
Standard Formula (per litre)
Orange Serum (solids equivalent to 200–250 mL fresh orange juice): 4.0–5.0 g
Yeast Extract: 3.0 g
Tryptone / Peptone: 10.0 g
Glucose: 4.0 g
K₂HPO₄: 3.0 g
Agar: 17.0 g
Typical Applications
Fruit Juice & Beverage Microbiology
Total viable count in orange, lemon, grapefruit, and mixed fruit juices
Quality control of concentrates, syrups, cordials, and carbonated beverages
Spoilage Microorganism Detection
Lactic acid bacteria (Lactobacillus, Leuconostoc)
Acetic acid bacteria (Acetobacter, Gluconobacter)
Heat-resistant spoilers (Alicyclobacillus)
Yeasts (Zygosaccharomyces, Candida)
Moulds (Penicillium, Byssochlamys)
Preparation Instructions
Medium Preparation
Suspend 41.0 g of dehydrated medium in 1 L purified water
Heat with frequent agitation and boil for 1 minute
Autoclave at 121 °C for 15 minutes
Cool to 45–50 °C
Pour into sterile Petri dishes
Incubation Conditions
Recommended Conditions
Incubation temperature: 30 ± 1 °C
Incubation time: 3–5 days
Some laboratories incubate at 25 °C for enhanced mould recovery
Interpretation of Results
Typical Colony Appearance
Lactic acid bacteria: Small, round, white to cream colonies
Acetobacter / Gluconobacter: Tiny, opaque colonies; may show clearing zones
Yeasts: Large, smooth, creamy colonies
Moulds: Filamentous mycelial growth with characteristic pigmentation
Storage & Stability
Storage Conditions
Prepared plates: Store at 2–8 °C in sealed packaging
Shelf life (prepared plates): Use within 4 weeks
Do not use plates showing dehydration, contamination, or pH drift
Intended Use
Regulatory Statement
For fruit-juice, soft-drink, and beverage microbiology testing only.
Not intended for medical, veterinary, or food consumption purposes.
Quality & Supply Assurance
Manufacturing & Documentation
Manufactured under controlled conditions
Meets ISO and IFU performance expectations
Certificate of Analysis (COA) available upon request
Technical support provided by Ausamics Life Science
Reference
Standards & Literature
Hays (1951)
Murdock et al. (1952)
IFU Method No. 3
ISO 13681:1999
Customs & Trade Information
Classification
HS / AHECC Code: 3821.00.00
Prepared culture media for development or maintenance of microorganisms