June 3, 2014 in General, Health and Safety, Repair and Maintenance

Mould – What it is and what to do about it

Mold has received considerable media attention recently, as though this were a new problem. While it’s true that mold in homes can be a problem, this is nothing new, and probably not news. However, since there is an increased level of awareness and concern, let’s look at the issue from a common sense perspective.

What is it?

Mold is a common term for a large family of fungi that have a cottony or woolly appearance. There are nearly a million species of mold. Mold is a naturally occurring organism that has been around far longer than us. Mold grows in buildings where there is moisture, air, a food source, and whenever the temperature is between 40 and 140 degrees F. When conditions for growth are not met, mold becomes dormant; it does not
die. Mold spreads by dispersing spores through the air as well as by growth on or within building materials.

Mold plays a key role

We can’t eliminate mold, but this is a good thing because we need mold to break down animal and vegetable matter. Mold plays a key role in the food chain. When we say things are rotting or decaying, we are referring to mold at work. If there were no mold, there would be no rot – and we’d all be buried under all the leaves and trees that ever fell down but never decayed.

Mold spores are everywhere

People sometimes tell us that they don’t have mold in their home. We ask what happens if they leave bread in a drawer for a month or don’t take out the garbage for two weeks. This helps them understand that no matter how clean they keep their home, mold spores are always there ready to grow on any favorable host. There are always mold spores in the air and there is always some mold in buildings, so the objective of a “mold-free home” is not realistic.

How dangerous is mold?

Since it is normal for mold to be present in air and in buildings, its mere existence is not necessarily a reason for alarm. But if mold is present in indoor air at levels higher than would be found in outdoor air, or if a significant mold colony is growing on building surfaces, it could be a cause for concern.

Mold risk falls into three broad categories:

  1. Some mold is harmless, a cosmetic nuisance.
  2. Some mold is allergenic to some people, in much the same way some people are allergic to peanut butter or shellfish.
  3. Toxic muold is dangerous for everyone, although young people, old people, and people with respiratory problems or compromised immune systems are most vulnerable.

Media articles about “black mold” like Stachybotrys have terrified some people. Actually it is common to find black Stachybotrys chartarum in small amounts in houses where there has been leakage or water entry. It is a toxic mold and it should be removed. But don’t assume that anything black on the wall or ceiling is highly toxic mold. Other common species are also black but may be of low or no toxicity. For example, Chateomium globosum is allergenic rather than toxic. Cladosporium sphaerospermum is often found growing indoors on bathroom tile or refrigerator gaskets. It’s a member of the most common mold family, Cladosporium, the “universal fungus” mold in your house might be only a cosmetic concern. “Bluestain” or Ceratocystis/Ophistoma is common on framing lumber and we often find it in attics on the underside of roof sheathing. Unless one of these cosmetic molds is in a living space, no action is needed.

Air-borne spores may cause distress

People may react to mold spores alone. There does not always have to be a visible growth to cause problems for sensitive people.

You can’t tell by looking

You cannot tell what kind of mold you are dealing with by looking at it. Don’t assume that “black mold” is “bad” and that other mold is OK. Lots of black molds are cosmetic concerns, not “toxic killers.” Some light colored molds, which are hard to see in your house, can be a health concern. Some species of Penicillium and Aspergillis are often light-gray to green, and these are probably more common than their infamous brother “Stachybotrys chartarum,” and may be more toxic. Of course, other Penicillium species are used as medicine. So competent identification is important. An expert, trained in microscopic identification of mold, can usually determine the identity of mold from a physical sample. We cannot rely on the naked eye, or on mold color to identify molds.

The home test kits are also not reliable. The swab, culture, settlement dish, or simple air sample methods these kits use are fundamentally inaccurate: for example, the spores collected and “grown” in culture using these methods could be dead, fail to grow on the culture medium, and still be toxic if inhaled. These methods are not a reliable way to determine or characterize a possible mold problem in a building.

For small mold problems, spend your money on some soap and water instead of one of these “tests.” For larger problems, hire an expert to survey your home, or send your own mold sample to a testing laboratory where the aerobiologist or mycologist will determine what’s in the sample.

Keeping mold in its place

Although mold is needed and always with us, we want to keep mold in its place, preferably outdoors. Wolves are a key part of the food chain too, but we don’t want them inside our homes. While we will always have some spores in our homes, the goal is to keep the spores from growing to problem levels.

Prevention is the key

Four things have to be present to have a mold growth:

  1. Mold spores
  2. Temperatures between 40 and 140 degrees F
  3. A moisture source
  4. A food source – this is wood or gypsum board, or that old bread in your bread box

So, how do we control mold growth?

  • We have said that mold spores are everywhere. So is their food. We can’t control
    those.
  • People are not comfortable in their homes at temperatures below 40 degrees or above 140 degrees, so this is no help.
  • The only thing left is moisture. The best way to prevent mold from growing is to control moisture. This is lucky in a way because controlling moisture is something we want to do in homes anyway.

Moisture sources

Sources of moisture in homes include:

  1. Leaks into or through roofs walls, door, windows, basements, etc. The leaks that come through usually get corrected quickly. The leaks that stay in walls, for example, often don’t get corrected because they are not noticed.
  2. Leaks from plumbing or heating systems.
  3. High humidity from cooking, bathing etc., resulting in condensation.
  4. Air conditioning systems, humidifiers, dehumidifiers, sump pits and other places
    where moisture is commonly present.

Getting rid of a mold problem – Step One – remove the mold

Most molds can be cleaned up easily with soap and water, or a mild bleach solution.
If the mold species is allergenic or toxic and present in large quantity, special procedures
may be necessary to assure that cleanup is performed safely and to prevent contamination
of other building areas or contents.

A word of caution

People who are allergic, asthmatic, infant, elderly, immune-impaired, etc., should not disturb mold and should not be in the area where mold remediation is being performed. Consult with your doctor, health department or other professional before tackling this job yourself.

Specialists with respirators, skin protection and eye protection should be called in to clean up large amounts (more than 30 square feet, an area 3 feet by 10 feet, for example) of toxic mold.

Getting rid of a mold problem – Step Two – remove the moisture

Once we get rid of the mold, the next step is to remove the moisture source that allowed the mold to grow. Curing leaks, improving drainage and drying things up are important steps in controlling mold.

Maintenance is important

Don’t forget to clean your refrigerator, including gaskets, coils, and evaporator tray. Regular furnace and air conditioning service will help ensure that standing water or chronic moisture is not an issue. Gutters and downspouts should be kept clear and leaks should be corrected.

Finding mold

Mold comes in many colors and may be visible and distinct. It can also be very subtle. Mold on a surface may be the tip of an iceberg, with considerable mold concealed behind the wall, for example. In other cases, the mold is only on the surface. The toughest situation is when the mold is entirely out of sight.

The best clues to look for are areas susceptible to mold. As we have discussed, these include high moisture areas.

To check more carefully and thus more successfully for mold, shine your flashlight along the wall surface in an area that has been damp or wet. Don’t shine it right at the wall or you won’t see much. Look where things have been wet or damp, regardless of whether it was a single event (washer flood) or one that happens after every rainstorm.

Here are a few areas that you might not have considered: under carpets that have been wet – check for moldy tack strips; previously wet cardboard boxes; at ceiling penetrations like smoke detectors; at the top of poorly-insulated exterior walls; behind wallpaper below windows. Take a careful look at your air conditioner as well as any heating or cooling air handlers and ductwork. Check especially “downstream” of the air handler on cooling systems since condensation there may promote mold growth. Ducts buried in concrete floor slabs are also susceptible. Look at humidifier trays attached to the furnace, and at heat recovery ventilators.

One indication of a problem is higher levels of spores inside the house than outside. This requires air sampling, of course.

Closing comments

Mold can be significant problem, but in most homes, good maintenance and common sense are the best weapons. As home inspectors have been saying for years, moisture is the biggest enemy of homes. Mold is just one of the results of high moisture levels.

Alan Carson and Daniel Friedman

About Alan Carson
Alan Carson is a senior technical educator and building failures researcher in Toronto. He has served as the President of OAHI, the Ontario Association of Home Inspectors, the President of ASHI, the American Society of Home Inspectors and he continues to write and teach in the field of building inspection and diagnosis. He is also a principal in Carson, Dunlop, a Toronto home inspection firm. Alan can be contacted at 1-800-268-7070.

About Daniel Friedman


Daniel Friedman is a mold/indoor air quality investigator and home inspector as well as a professional writer Poughkeepsie, New York. He is a member of the American Industrial Hygiene Association and the American Society of Home Inspectors. He presently chairs ASHI’s national Standards of Practice Committee and has led ASHI’s Education and Technical Committees as well as serving on ASHI’s Exam, and Ethics/Professional Practices Committees.