simply new homes are more wet. moulds reproduce themselves more where the moisture is more.
Yes, there are mushrooms, mold, truffles, and some rusts. There are about1.5 million species of fungi.
Mold can reproduce more quickly in warmer environments. The increased temperature gives the fungi more Energy.
A form of the bread mold fungi called rizopus.
No. Molds are fungi. Viruses are not fungi. Fungi can get viruses, just like you or I, but there are no viruses that are fungi. There are no fungi that are viruses. This does not address whether you can get fungal meningitis from black mold, but you absolutely definitively cannot get viral meningitis from black mold. Additionally, having fungal meningitis might make you more or less susceptible to getting viral meningitis, but you probably won't be too concerned with viral meningitis if you're busy fighting fungal meningitis. You won't be concerned with much else at all.
Slime molds are fungus-like protists. They have a feeding and a reproducing stage in life. See link below for more information.
Poor people are more likely to be significantly affected. This is primarily because they are more likely to live in poorly constructed housing or trailer homes. These homes are more likely to be destroyed than well-built homes, resulting in more property loss and a greater chance of injury or death.
Fruit mould is a fungus called Penicillium from which is made penicillin. Bread mould is a fungus Mucor and a slime mould is probably a different, more obscure type of fungus.
Bread mold and mushrooms are both types of fungi that obtain nutrients by breaking down organic matter. Both reproduce through spores, and play important roles in the ecosystem by decomposing organic material and cycling nutrients.
normal bread molds faster because it has more sugar and energy to feed the fungi.
Population growth has affected Middle America because they have had to build more homes.
All of the animals cannot stay in their homes any more because their homes are polluted and covered in oil.
Rhizopus stolonifer is more commonly known as black bread mold. Rhizopus stolonifer is a part of the family Mucoraceae due to the key feature of a swollen extension of the sporangiophore. It looks like a balloon in the sporangium.