There are over 5,000,000 species of fungi, however only about two dozen are found indoors. Molds which prefer to be indoors are different than those found outdoors, even within the same species. Mold growth is very predictable. In fact, we do not even need to know if it is present; we simply need to know if the environment is suitable for mold growth. In knowing what moisture is present, a mold assessor can identify the specie of mold which is present without sampling.
Fungi on indoor building materials are classified into three groups based on the amount of moisture they need to colonize:
Water activity (Aw) is also referred to as “equilibrated relative humidity” and it is the single, most important factor in determining whether mold growth can be initiated on building materials. I know, this is a little dry but hang in there, it gets much easier! You see, any building material can only hold so much moisture before it disintegrates. The amount of moisture which can be absorbed determines what mold group can colonize, form mycelium and produce spores. See, it all makes sense now – it is not the mold, IT’S THE MOISTURE!
Mold is the common term used to describe fungi. Mold is not a scientific name. It is “street slang”. See, you know as much as the mold tester now.
Fungi have a vegetative body which functions like the roots, trunk, and branches of a tree. It is a network of connected microscopic tubes called hyphae. We rarely see those parts; the part we see, the black, green, or blue mold is the reproductive part. Think of the apple on the tree; if we remove the apple, we have not killed the tree. To kill the tree, we would need to remove the food and water source needed for nutrition.
Local differences in ventilation, surface temperature, water vapor and humidity creates micro-climates. Think of air-conditioned spaces and imagine your AC system is not working properly, and the indoor humidity is elevated because the unit is not capable of removing excess water vapor from the air…you are now subject to developing a problem with “opportunistic molds” like aspergillus if you live in an area with elevated relative humidity or water vapor in the air.
Different building materials support different mold groups. Wood, wood composites (like plywood, chipboard or OSB), and materials with a high starch content can support opportunistic mold growth with low Aw but it rarely supports colonization of tertiary molds unless the water diffusion is severe or systemic. What does this mean?
Property360is a professional inspection firm. We are your local expert for home inspection commercial property condition assessment, mold and indoor air quality assessment, forensic moisture investigations, fire door inspection, forensic termite inspection (provided by 360PestControl), americans with disabilities facility surveys (ADA), second opinions and expert testimony, building code inspection, new construction inspection, construction defect assessment, construction as-built inspection, contractor draw request inspection, construction management, contractor dispute resolution, fire and flood damage assessment, and residential insurance onspections – wind mitigation and 4-point reports.
Contact us to learn more about our team and to request a comprehensive residential or commercial inspection at (904) 503-9808 today!
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