no. there are over 80 million species in kingdom Monera, which includes bacteria, parasites and fungi, of which mold is a part of. There is at least 20000 differen types of bacteria on the tip of your finger at any given moment.
No not necessary just because it mold doesn't mean its all the same. It can be Rhizome's Cronin's mold, or it can be Magdalena mold.
Yes but if the bread has any extras lie seeds and stuff hen it migh gro adiffernt one
no they do not
no !
Yes, All Mold DOES NOT Grow On The Same Type Of Bread.
"The same species of mold will grow on any variety of bread." Although, I would suggest something that is more easily testable if this is for a lab. "The same species of mold will grow on white and whole wheat bread."
White bread is wheat bread, so yes, bread made from different types of wheat flour would grow similar or identical molds, depending on exposure to various types of mold spores.
No, they do not. I tested the bread and the flat bread molded the fastest, then wheat bread then sourdough bread. White does not mold because of the preservatives in it.
No. 2 different types of mold.
Many different onesMost bread molds are found in the phylum Zygomycota. See the related link.Some common bread mould are rhizopus (a black fuzzyish fungi), penicillium (the mould which can produce penicillin), and nigrican.
i feel it doesn't because some factories make their bread and use different chemicals,ad ingredients so the mold is not the same but i really don't know ok can u give me a picthers of some bubble gum text back ok
Pita, because it is a type of bread, will most commonly develop the same forms of mold that other breads do.Two of the most common are Rhizopus, a blackish fuzzy fungus, and Penicillium, which is a bluish-grayish-greenish fuzzy fungus usually having a white border.Breads are of course not limited to these two types.Excerpt from article I found on:http://moldblogger.com/q-a-molds-that-grow-on-food/
no they don't. wheat bread takes longer to mold than white bread.
The purpose of the experiment was to discover how the type of bread affected the amount of mold. The bread was cut and placed in separate Ziploc bags. The bread was measured for mold every day and was recorded on the data sheet. My hypothesis was "If the white, wheat, whole wheat, sourdough, and sweet bread were placed in Ziploc bags and left for 20 days, then the sweet bread would grow the most mold because the sweet bread had the most energy (sugar) that the mold can use to grow." Whole Wheat bread was the type of bread that grew the most mold, while white, wheat, and sourdough did not grow any mold. When Whole Wheat bread was left to mold, it grew an average of 60.91 square cm. When sweet bread was left to mold, it grew an average of .58 square cm. of mold. When white, wheat, and sourdough were left to mold, they grew no visible mold.
Yes. Mold has to have moisture in order to grow. You don't see moldy croûtons, unless the bread used to make them was already moldy. If bread is placed in plastic bags when it is too warm, condensation forms on the inside of the inside of the bags and the bread tends to mold faster.
It depends are the 2 pieces of bread moist and stored in the same place then probably not but if otherwise yea it probably will because it applies moisture to the bread and provides food to the mold