Comment by Aurornis
2 days ago
> If a home has an active mold problem, it probably has an active water or moisture problem.
Mold can't grow or spread without moisture, so a moisture problem is a necessary prerequisite for a mold problem.
So focusing on fixing any moisture problems is a great place to start. Feeling around walls and baseboards or climbing up into the attic in the hours and days after a big rainstorm is one way to get started without any equipment investment. Air circulation also helps dry things out, so make sure every space has some openings for air exchange.
> or spread
Not explicitly true - dry spores get anywhere dust does.
Whether they become active growth or not is a different question.
I wonder if there's anything that can be done from an ecological perspective, encouraging the presence of (acceptable) organisms that consume the problematic fungal spore species.
Mold spores are everywhere. If they were a useful and plentiful food source, an organism would have evolved to consume them in bulk by now.
The presence of spores isn’t a problem by itself and eliminating them isn’t feasible.
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Spores are kind of designed to not be valuable as food. Can you name some organisms that actually consume spores rather than eat and then poop them out?
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