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Product category: Cell/tissue handling and counting
News Release from: Synbiosis | Subject: Protocol
Edited by the Laboratorytalk Editorial Team on 11 November 2002

Automated colony counter is Ukas
accredited

Independent validation shows this method can rapidly produce highly accurate counts of microbes sampled from water and could be used to help control disease outbreaks

Synbiosis reports that its Protocol automated colony counter has been awarded prestigious Ukas accreditation in a major UK-based water authority The independent validation shows this method can rapidly produce highly accurate counts of microbes sampled from water and could be used to help control disease outbreaks

To achieve the accreditation, Protocol, which Synbiosis says is one of the dominant systems in the automated colony counting market, was used in studies to enumerate potentially hazardous water contaminants.

The data from the automated counts were compared to those achieved with other counting methods and since the results were not statistically different, accreditation was awarded.

Using its CCD camera and integrated software, Protocol can transfer an image of an agar plate to computer.

Here the software analyses the colonies while also automatically compensating for different coloured media and agar thickness, as well as artefacts such as bubbles or debris.

The software is so powerful it can even enumerate touching colonies and colonies of varying sizes, making Protocol ideal for counting the mixed population of microbes found in water.

Simon Johns, international product manager for Synbiosis, explained: "With the remote but worrying possibility of deliberate contamination of our environment, it is reassuring to know that Protocol's automated colony counting has been validated as an accurate way of enumerating microbes sampled from water. Request a free brochure from Synbiosis ...

Since it can count virtually any bacteria on any type of plate in seconds, Protocol could be used by microbiologists to help quickly enumerate harmful micro-organisms from a range of environmental samples thus preventing the spread of disease.".

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