Q.66. The technique of microbial “pure culture” was pioneered by
(A) Edward Jenner
(B) Louis Pasteur
(C) Robert Hooke
(D) Robert Koch
The technique of microbial “pure culture,” essential for isolating single bacterial species, was pioneered by Robert Koch. This breakthrough enabled precise identification of disease-causing microbes. The correct answer is (D) Robert Koch.
Correct Answer
Robert Koch developed methods like agar plate streaking and pour plates to grow bacteria in isolation. His work in the 1880s, including culturing anthrax and tuberculosis bacilli, established pure culture as a microbiology cornerstone. Koch’s techniques remain standard in labs today.
Option Analysis
Edward Jenner
Edward Jenner pioneered smallpox vaccination in 1796 using cowpox material. His cowpox-smallpox immunity discovery founded vaccinology, not microbial culturing.
Louis Pasteur
Louis Pasteur advanced germ theory, disproved spontaneous generation, and invented pasteurization. He studied microbial fermentation but did not develop pure culture isolation methods.
Robert Hooke
Robert Hooke observed microorganisms through early microscopes in 1665, coining “cell.” His work laid microscopy foundations without pure culture techniques.
Robert Koch
Koch isolated pure cultures using agar suggested by Fanny Hesse, enabling Koch’s postulates for linking microbes to diseases like anthrax and TB.


