Molds and fungi invade the material the same way they invade wood or anything else. Kind of like a tree root can break cement after enough time, or water pipes. Only molds and fungus are a lot smaller. That's why they seal treated areas after mold treatments to cut off oxygen to the mold/fungus, and to prevent out gassing and the spread of any spores left alive. It's also why in some states you have to disclose mold treatments when you sell a house.

Annie

Control your destiny or somebody else will.~Jack Welsh


MaryAnn Helland wrote:

So, Mike. I live in the south -- where heat and moisture are common, especially in the summer. At least a couple times every summer, I find a mold patch or two on my shower curtain, where it folds together when the shower is not in use. I keep a spray bottle of bleach right in the shower area so I can spray these as soon as I spot them, then I rinse the area with clean water as soon as the mold disappears from the shower curtain. The shower curtain, incidentally, is vinyl. Are you saying that I when I do this, I haven't killed the mold? That the spores remain alive? If so, then where are they?
MA


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