Would Staph aureus multiply faster on standard agar or on/in the human body?

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qwerty

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Hello!

This is my first question of Yahoo Answers!!! So thanks for reading.

Now, assume both Petri dish and body temperature are stable at 37 degrees Celsius. Notwithstanding the many factors that could affect rate of bacterial growth on/in a body, assume the person is quite clean and otherwise healthy. The immune system is not compromised.

(As a side question: Is the subject of bacterial growth on agar vs. animal in a paper somewhere? I've searched, but perhaps my searches have been overly specific. I didn't come up with anything.)

Thanks
 
It will multiply faster in the petri dish, as the agar is simply nutrients and the body has defense mechanisms in place to battle microbiota.
 
Agar.

In a human it faces limited nutrients and must produce its virulence factors to escape the immune system.
 
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