Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Bread Mold Science Fair Projects Ideas

If you're seeing for an exciting science fair project, then you may want to read more about bread mold science fair projects that you can do. They are easy and reasonable to do but also allow you to supervene all the steps of the scientific method.

It helps to first understand a microscopic about mold. Mold is other word for fungi whose bodies acquire and congeal together to form cottony vegetative bodies. Not all mold is cottony, however. Types of slimy mold are more like amoeba than their cottony cousins and leave a moister, slicker mass on the molded surface. However when it comes to bread, you will most always see the drier, threadlike mold.

Mold generally grows on bread faster in warm, dark, moist conditions. However, mold can grow in light, and some molds can even grow on frosty foods. Molds grow in varying conditions, at varying speeds, in every color you can think of.

Not just a disgusting increasing to old food, mold can be useful in many ways. One of the most tasteless ways mold is used positively is to make antibiotics such as penicillin. In 1928, Alexander Fleming accidentally discovered penicillin when he found mold growing on a discarded petri dish. The mold itself was not the miracle. Fleming discovered that the mold that had grown had killed the Staphylococcus aureus that he'd been growing in that single petri dish. The rest is history!

Now that you know a microscopic more about bread mold, you can use the ideas below to help you find possible bread mold science fair projects.

Does sodium have an supervene on the growth of bread mold?

How and why does mold form on bread?

Is bread mold harmful to the human body if consumed? Why?

What are the optimal conditions for growing bread mold? Why?

Does light have an supervene on the growth of bread mold? If so, what kind?

Do distinct types of breads mold faster than others?

How to grow bread mold...

Take a cotton swab and acquire some dust. Wipe the dust over the bread slices you want to experiment with. Place them in a bag with a few drops of water and seal the bag so the slices don't dry out.

Now you know a microscopic more about bread mold and the types of experiments you can do. You may have an idea of what you would like to try as a project. Plainly by request questions about things that interest you, you can come up with great bread mold science fair projects that can be fun to do!

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