IsaacScience Posted September 26, 2007 Posted September 26, 2007 Hi, I have a pet turtle and have heard that salmonella comes with turtles. For a science fair project I'd like to quantify the amount of salmonella (if any) in the turtle's water. Anyone have any thoughts on methods I could use to test the water?
ecoli Posted September 27, 2007 Posted September 27, 2007 quick google search revealed this: http://www.geneq.com/catalog/en/sas_salmonella_test.html it's an chromatography assay.
John Cuthber Posted September 27, 2007 Posted September 27, 2007 "it's an chromatography assay." Oh no it isn't.
DrDNA Posted September 27, 2007 Posted September 27, 2007 I thought that you would need to do a test with antibodies but here is an "instant" home test "strip" kit for ecoli and salmonella for 20 bucks: http://www.exit15.com/instant-food-test-strip-kit-for-salmonella-and-ecoli-p-1360.html
ecoli Posted September 28, 2007 Posted September 28, 2007 "it's an chromatography assay."Oh no it isn't. excuse me... I meant immunochromatography assay. Dr. DNA - how quantitative is that test? Aren't test strips usually more qualitative?
DrDNA Posted September 28, 2007 Posted September 28, 2007 You are right. Test strips are usually designed to be qualitative. But they are generally derived from somewhat quant tests. I'll bet that whatever is on that test strip can be calibrated to measure conc. For example, set a dilution series of know conc of salmonella to calibrate...time for responce and/or color change/intensity, etc....whatever is appropriate for the strip. Importantly, you will also need to determine the time span in which the responce is linear. That is critical
IsaacScience Posted September 29, 2007 Author Posted September 29, 2007 Thanks for the suggestions. I looked at the strips but at $10 each I won't be able to play around with them much to see how they react. They'll be my backup plan but if anyone has any other suggestions I'd love to hear them. I have a university a few miles from my house - think they could help?
DrDNA Posted September 29, 2007 Posted September 29, 2007 Isaac, There is great chance that someone in the microbio dept could help. They also might be able to help you figure out exactly what is on those test strips so perhaps you could make you own assay, based on the same tech, much cheaper. Good luck.
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