Household mold is a common problem, and Cladosporium mold is one of the most widespread varieties. Learn about Cladosporium and how to eliminate it.
What to Know About Cladosporium Mold
Mold plays a vital role in natural ecosystems, but it becomes a serious health concern when it appears indoors. In your home, mold is a sign of excessive moisture, high humidity, or hidden leaks, and it can pose significant health risks. One common mold you might encounter is Cladosporium, a widespread mold found around the world, typically outdoors. However, it can easily make its way inside, impacting indoor air quality and potentially causing allergic reactions, asthma, or other respiratory issues.
In this guide, we’ll explore how to identify Cladosporium, the dangers it poses and the best methods for removing it from your home. With expert insights from Mike Sacenti of American Healthy Homes, you’ll learn how to protect your home and family from this common indoor mold.
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What Is Cladosporium Mold?
Cladosporium is a genus of mold with 40 documented species and at least 180 more unnamed species, making it extremely widespread and difficult to identify precisely. Most species show up as black, brown or olive green molds, and are some of the most common molds found outdoors and inside.
Many Cladosporium species grow on decaying plants or even other fungi. When they reach maturity, they release airborne spores which are carried and dispersed by the wind. When this happens, air near a large mold growth can temporarily be thick with spores.
Where Is Cladosporium Mold Commonly Found?
Like many molds, Cladosporium is found all over the world, with most species preferring temperatures between 65 F and 82 F (18 C and 28 C). It’s most likely to grow in wet, damp or humid areas. Outdoors, Cladosporium is often found on dead or dying plants and rotting organic material. Indoors, it can grow in bathrooms, on carpets, wallpaper, fabrics, wood and painted surfaces. “The mold’s root system has to get into something porous and organic like wood, paper or cardboard,” Sacenti says. “It will also grow on extremely dusty, dirty surfaces and feed off the organic material found there.”
What Are the Health Effects?
Although most Cladosporium species don’t cause infections in humans, prolonged exposure to the mold or its spores can cause allergies or asthma-like symptoms in healthy people, and significantly worsen existing symptoms in asthmatics.
A few species can also cause infections in the ears, eyes, nose and sinuses. Too much exposure can lead to fungal sinusitis, a condition where fungal matter grows in the nose, mouth and sinus passages, causing excessive mucus buildup, congestion and ongoing headaches. As with other molds, people with pre-existing respiratory issues are most vulnerable to Cladosporium. “The reality is, most people are not going to be affected by exposure to Cladosporium unless there are pre-existing health issues,” Sacenti says.
How to Remove and Prevent Cladosporium Mold
The first step to removing any indoor mold, including Cladosporium, is getting rid of the moisture that allowed it to grow. If you have water in your basement, find out why and fix the problem. Got a leaky sink or appliance? Get it repaired.
It’s also possible that your entire home has poor indoor air quality and excessive indoor humidity, due to insufficient ventilation, especially during the winter heating season. In cases like these, open some windows or install a heat recovery ventilator (HRV). These measures will help stop new mold from forming, but won’t kill active Cladosporium spores already there. For that you’ll need a non-toxic registered fungicide such as Concrobium.
About the Expert
- Michael Sacenti owns American Healthy Homes. He has 10 years of experience in the mold remediation industry and 40 years experience in real estate maintenance.