From where does fungus come on bread?
Answers
Answered by
2
hey mate
here is ur answer..
The fungus will have come from microscopic spores drifting through the air - they are really common which is why mould etc seems to be able to get everywhere. If the bread was sealed after baking it will have got 'contaminated' when you first opened it (just with spores). The mould in bread is very very fast growing with the hyphea (the growths of the fungus - like little tubes) extending at about 1mm per hour - it doesnt seem that much but is actually very fast which is why once you have got just a little mould the bread goes bad very quickly
here is ur answer..
The fungus will have come from microscopic spores drifting through the air - they are really common which is why mould etc seems to be able to get everywhere. If the bread was sealed after baking it will have got 'contaminated' when you first opened it (just with spores). The mould in bread is very very fast growing with the hyphea (the growths of the fungus - like little tubes) extending at about 1mm per hour - it doesnt seem that much but is actually very fast which is why once you have got just a little mould the bread goes bad very quickly
Arnava10:
thanks
Answered by
14
Hey friend,
There are microbes in the air everywhere. These settle down on bread and reproduce and you see the fungus in bread.
Hope this helps you..
Please mark brainliest if it was helpful.
There are microbes in the air everywhere. These settle down on bread and reproduce and you see the fungus in bread.
Hope this helps you..
Please mark brainliest if it was helpful.
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