"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."
Five types of mold that grow on bread are penicillium, rhizopus nigricans, aspergillus, mucon, and Rhizopis stolnifer.
i asked that question
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.
Mold will grow on any type of bread as long as the conditions are right. Mold likes to grow when it is warm, moist and dark.
green mold
No. There are thousands - perhaps over 100,000 - varieties of mold, and not all of them do, or even can, live on bread.
A hypothesis is a question that a scientist comes up with, which will later form the basis of experiments or testing which will attempt to answer the hypothesis. For an avocado, an interesting hypothesis might be, 'Will the pit of an avocado grow hydroponically?'
yes. in fact, the only food mould doesn't grow on is honey!
A hypothesis is not a question. If you are in Jr. High or something near that, you can use the structure: If......, then.... to state your hypothesis. For example: If I place one plant in a closet and one plant in the sunlight, then the plant in the sunlight will grow faster.
Starts with "If" and half way has "then" ex. If a plant is given fertilizer, then it will grow faster. A HYPOTHESIS IS ALWAYS IN STATEMENT FORM... NEVER IN QUESTION FORM!!
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.
Mold will grow faster on white bread.