Yes.Thay can stay dormand even for 100 years in enviroments.
it helps form decay-resistant fluoraptite
The answer is Calcium.
flouride
brush your teeth
Fluoride
Bread gets moldy when it comes in contact with mold spores that are present in the air. Bread is a good food source for mold. Moisture paired with warm air causes the mold spores to reproduce rapidly.
You can, but since that is the main support it would be best to replace it, preferably with decay resistant lumber.
Possible pollution of soils and waters; also pollution with radium and radon from the decay chain.
bacilli bacteria (Bacillus anthracis) causes anthrax in sheep and humans, and (lactobacillus) causes tooth decay and is also an ingredient in yogurt. Bacilli can cause tetanus (lockjaw) typhoid feaver, tuberculosis, and diphtheria (Milady's Standard Cosmetology ~source)
Depending on what type of wood chairs you have, they may or may not need to be treated. For example, Teak is resistant to decay and incest infestation. Other woods like pine must be treated with a preservative to prevent decay.
A cleistocarpous (rather than a cleistocarpic) moss is a moss whose capsules do not open to release the included spores. Only after decay of the moss and its capsules are the spores dispersed (over, of course, a relatively short distance). Phascum cuspidatum (Toothed phascum moss) is a well known example. HdB
Flourine compounds help develop decay-resistant teeth, idk about flouride water but fluorine is very reactive especially with water