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ALLERGEN TESTS for BUILDINGS
MOLD INFORMATION CENTER
FLOODS & MOLD CLEAN/PREVENT
MOLD ACTION GUIDE - WHAT TO DO
MOLD DETECTION & INSPECTION
HOW TO LOOK FOR MOLD
  CHOOSE SAMPLE POINT
  SAMPLING DRYWALL FOR MOLD
  SAMPLING MISTAKES
  USE A FLASHLIGHT
WHAT MOLD LOOKS LIKE
ATTIC MOLD
BASEMENT MOLD
CRAWLSPACE MOLD
DRYWALL MOLD
FIBERGLASS MOLD
MOLD ON DIRT FLOORS
MOLDY CARPETS
ITCHY FABRICS
HIDDEN MOLD, HOW TO FIND
INSULATION MOLD
DO-IT-YOURSELF WARNINGS
More Information
  What Mold Looks Like
  Stuff That is Not Mold
  Allergens, Finding
  Mold Test Kits

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Photograph: Mold on drywall - Daniel Friedman Mold on Walls, Drywall, or "Sheetrock" - How to Find & Test for Mold on Walls
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  • How to sample mold on drywall or "sheetrock"(R) surfaces
  • Where to look, where to collect mold samples
  • Moldy drywall sampling mistakes to avoid
  • Proper use of a flashlight finds "hidden" mold on drywall
  • What mold looks like in different areas or on different surfaces
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The photo above shows several colors of mold on a drywall surface. Still more mold may be present but still lighter in color and harder to see. Each of these may be a different mold genera or species. Which molds that we see on a building surface should be sampled? We explain the answers here.

This document describes how to find mold and test for mold in buildings, including how and where to collect mold samples using adhesive tape - an easy, inexpensive, low-tech but very effective mold testing method. This procedure helps identify the presence of or locate the probable sources of mold reservoirs in buildings, and helps decide which of these need more invasive, exhaustive inspection and testing.

This chapter is part of a 'how to' photo and text primer on finding and testing for mold in buildings using simple clear adhesive tape on suspect or visibly moldy surfaces. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

Photograph: Multiple tape samples on one zip-lok bag - Daniel FriedmanSAMPLING Building DRYWALL Gypsum Board, "Sheetrock" and other Building Surfaces for Mold Using Clear Adhesive Tape

As I've explained in various articles and at my instructions for collecting and mailing a tape sample to our lab, different mold genera/species will be found growing on the same or nearby sections of drywall on a building surface, depending on several variables. If the largest contiguous mold area in a building is trivial in amount, say 1 sq .ft., I would not test it unless I thought that the mold I see is representative of a larger mold problem I cannot see. Small areas of mold should simply be removed.

For larger areas of mold (certainly if more than 30 sq .ft. of area is moldy or if mold is growing on many surfaces in a building), you are looking for the dominant species present and particularly allergenic or toxic species present in the environment.

How to Decide Where to Sample for Mold and How Many Mold Samples To Collect

Collect one mold tape sample per location; do not use the same tape to sample from multiple locations.

  • Choose a representative sample spot: select a representative spot of mold growth on a surface such as a wall, cabinet, ceiling or floor. This means that if you see what appears to be a single coating of mold-suspect growth on a surface, all rather consistent by color, texture, and what it's growing-on, you need only one sample of that material. Variations in appearance or texture or growth surface or mold growing in different building areas or floors are reasons to sample more than one thing:

    • Color: Sample molds of different colors: black, white, green, red, gray, brown, yellow, pink - are often (not always) different species.

    • Texture: Sample molds of different textures: hard lumpy big grainy versus fuzzy and easily blowing into the air - are often (not always) different species.

    • Growth Surface: Sample molds growing on different building materials. This is quite important. Completely different mold genera and species may be found growing in the same building on different growth substrates: drywall room side, drywall cavity side, plywood sheathing, wood stud or joist framing, painted surfaces, exposed fiberglass insulation kraft paper vapor barrier - are often (not always) different species. Even on the same growth surface (drywall for example) different mold species appear at different locations according to variations in moisture level - explained just below)

    • Building area: basement, crawl space, living area, and attic all have different moisture conditions, often different building materials, different patterns of air movement and exposure. The "green mold" found on wood subflooring visible overhead from inspection in the basement is very often a completely different genera and species from the "green mold" found on the roof sheathing in the attic of the same building.

    • Representative dust samples: we will sometimes screen areas where there is no visible mold by collecting settled dust particles from a horizontal surface. If you are going to collect a single dust screening sample, collect it either from the area of which you are most suspicious (a flooding basement), or from the area where building occupants spend the most time (perhaps a bedroom or family room).

  • Variations in moisture gradient in the drywall - so if a floor was flooded, water-loving molds grow closest to the floor (such as highly-visible black molds like Stachybotrys chartarum), while molds liking the drywall to be a little less wet grow a little higher (such as Cladosporium sp., Cladosporium sphaerospermum, Cladosporium cladosporioides, Ulocladium chartarum), and molds liking the drywall to be still less wet grow higher still on a vertical wall (such as Aspergillus sp., Aspergillus glaucus, Aspergillus flavus, Penicillium sp., etc.). Therefore where the tape sample is collected can make a big difference in what you find.
  • Photograph: Moldy drywall supports different mold genera and species at different moisture levels in the same area - Daniel Friedman
    In the first photo of moldy drywall, three completely different mold genera and species were within a few inches of one another at different heights on this laundry room wall.

    This condition often occurs, but the different genera may be as close as inter-mixed and even overlapping in the same area, to growing several feet apart on the same wall, to growing in the same building but on different materials on different surfaces.

    In this case, tape sample #1, the bottom mold, was Stachybotrys chartarum, tape sample #2, the middle mold, was Cladosporium sphaerospermum, and the top tape sample, #3, was Aspergillus flavus. Of these three, the Aspergillus is the easily-airborne toxic spore which is more likely to be a problem in the building if it is present in sufficient quantity.

    How to Prepare & Save Mold Tape Samples for Mailing to a Mold Test Laboratory

    Photograph: Multiple tape samples on one zip-lok bag - Daniel Friedman In this photo detail you'll see that using a new and clean zip-lok bag, we placed several surface tape samples on the same bag. If you can't assure that the bag surface is clean between tape sampling, use a new bag for each sample.

  • Interruptions in the moisture gradient absorption path: for example at a wet floor which soaks the bottom of drywall, moisture wicks up into the drywall material. But moisture wicking may be reduced suddenly at a horizontal drywall joint, resulting in easily-visible borders or lines in fungal growth.

  • Exact pathway of water on a surface or in a building cavity: so tracing the exact water path through a ceiling or wall cavity is very important.

Are you collecting too many mold test samples?

There are nearly always multiple mold species present in any environment where mold producing conditions are present.

We sample surfaces likely to host different molds, focusing on surfaces which appear to represent mold or mold-suspect material growing over large areas in the building. Don't collect and send 50 samples. If you find you want to collect a great many samples it would probably be smarter and more economical to bring in an expert to survey the building and who can sample more strategically.

Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.


ALLERGEN TESTS for BUILDINGS
MOLD INFORMATION CENTER
FLOODS & MOLD CLEAN/PREVENT
MOLD ACTION GUIDE - WHAT TO DO
MOLD DETECTION & INSPECTION

HOW TO LOOK FOR MOLD
WHAT MOLD LOOKS LIKE
ATTIC MOLD
BASEMENT MOLD
CRAWLSPACE MOLD
MOLDY CARPETS
ITCHY FABRICS
HIDDEN MOLD, HOW TO FIND
INSULATION MOLD
More Information
  What Mold Looks Like
  Stuff That is Not Mold
  Allergens, Finding
  Mold Test Kits

InspectAPedia Home & Site Map
Air Conditioning
InspectAPedia Bookstore
Electrical
Environment
Exteriors
Heating
Home Inspection
Insulate Ventilate
Interiors
Mold Inspect/Test
Plumbing
Water
Septic
Roofing
Structure
Accuracy & Bias Pledge
Contact Us

More Information on Finding, Recognizing, and Proper Testing for Mold, More on Building Diagnostic Inspections and Repairs

Mold and Allergen Recognition and Identification - Not All "Black Mold" is Harmful; Some Suspect Stuff is Not Mold

goto InspectAPedia.com - authoritative, in-depth Building Diagnostic and Repair Information for building buyers, owners, inspectorsInspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map - Building Inspection, Diagnosis, & Repair, Environmental Inspection & Testing - Research Website

GO TO the MOLD and INDOOR ENVIRONMENT INFORMATION CENTER for in-depth advice on avoiding testing for or cleaning up mold and other indoor environmental hazards, odors, gases, contaminantsThe Mold Information Center: What to Do About Mold in Buildings, When and How to Inspect for Mold, Clean Up Mold, or Avoid Mold Problems

GO TO our PRE PURCHASE BUILDING INSPECTION SERVICES: Authoritative information for home buyers and home owners is included with your inspection.Home Inspection Construction Consulting Services & advice for home buyers

GO TO MOLD TEST KITS: This expert-recommended mold test kit is cheap and yet top performing *IF* you use a competent analysis laboratory!Use this simple, economical mold test kit by following our instructions on how to collect and mail mold samples to our lab

GO TO IAQ/MOLD-TEST LAB SERVICES: Mold, Pollen, indoor air quality, field and laboratory services by an expert.Environmental Inspection, Testing, & Diagnosis On-Site IAQ, Gas, Air Testing, Mold Investigation, Sick Building Diagnosis, Lab Services, & Remediation Plan Preparation - indoor air quality testing, problem source determination, supporting lab work, written remediation plan addressing removal of environmental and other hazards and prevention of their recurrence.

CONTACT Daniel Friedman - Dan is a senior ASHI home inspector, nationally recognized expert on building inspection, building failures, and sick building investigationContact Daniel Friedman for website content suggestions or for fee-paid consulting

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04/30/2008 - 04/01/02 - www.inspect-ny.com/sickhouse/MoldOnDrywall.htm © Copyright 2008-2002 Daniel Friedman - All Rights Reserved