"The House Eating Fungus"
The following is some information I found on this structure damaging
macro-fungi to date (May 1, 2001), and I will update this information
as I get it. In the last 2 decades Meruliaporia incrassata, sp.,
an orange colored mushroom shaped macro fungus, with the appearance
of pancake batter, has shown up recently in homes from San Diego
to northern California. However, poria incrassata, the water-conducting
fungus occurs mainly in the southern states, it can be found anywhere.
In the past poria was confined mainly to the Gulf states. "It's
a rare fungus, but it's as common here as anywhere in the world,"
said UC Riverside plant pathology professor John Menge. "It's also
the most devastating wood-decaying fungus of houses that we know
of." Poria is one of many wood decaying fungi that feeds on dead
wood. It sounds like science fiction and looks like it too, but
poria, like all decaying fungi, is an organism that needs moisture
to break down and utilize wood as a food source, according to forest
product experts at UC Berkeley. But unlike other wood-decaying fungi,
which tend to destroy only a six inch area around a plumbing leak
or wet windowsill, poria has the capacity to begin in wet soil as
opposed to just damp soil. Experts say the water-conducting fungi
differ from most other wood decaying fungi in several respects:
Large, tough water-conducting roots called rhizomorphs are formed
which transport water by capillary action from a constant source
(usually damp or wet soil) to dry wood in a building, wetting it
sufficiently to support decay. As decay proceeds, water is conducted
to dry wood adjacent to that already colonized fungi. In this manner,
as long as the supply of water is available, water-conducting fungi
can colonize and decay the wood to the entire structure. Poria will
usually start under a newly installed patio, with new landscaping
or with a new room addition, and can travel far from its original
water source. Wayne Wilcox, a UC Berkeley forestry professor, has
found a similarity among houses with poria and the fact that major
landscaping was done within 2 years of poria's onset. He speculates
that the soil dumped on these suburban lawns originated in various
forests around the world, where poria occurs naturally and helps
in the process of decomposition, and he feels poria may have come
along for the ride. Donna Kingwell, a spokeswoman for the California
state's Structural Pest Control Board, said the agency "is keenly
aware of the potent problems of poria, especially in the southern
part of California. First reports of poria incrassata destruction
surfaced in 1913 in the southeastern United States, where forest
products were the suspected origin of the fungus-abound. There is
no record of the first reported case of poria in California, according
to Wayne Wilcox, a UC Berkeley forestry professor, but scientists
discovered the telltale spores on three coastal redwoods in 1924.
Infestations of poria are rare. Only 15 cases were reported state
wide by 1968, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture study.
"When poria does invade a house, it's almost always catastrophic",
said Mississippi State University wood technology professor Terry
Amburgey. "The fungus will infiltrate a foundation, wood or concrete,
and pretty soon the entire house goes". Poria has an appetite not
only for common construction woods such as oak and pine, but for
cedar, redwood, cypress and juniper that are naturally decay-resistant.
In addition to attacking most woods classed as naturally decay resistant,
laboratory tests show that poria is resistant to many fungicides
containing copper. The practical significance of this tolerance
is uncertain, but no failures of wood treated with copper fungicides
have been reported in buildings to date. When poria attacks a building,
spectacular damage often results once well established it can destroy
large areas of floors and walls every year or so. Fortunately, control
is relatively simple, i.e. the permanent elimination of the water
source. Although poria is relatively rare, the rapid and extensive
damage it can cause makes it desirable to understand the conditions
leading to the attract, the signs indicating an attack is in progress,
and methods of prevention and control of an attack. Control and
Remediation "The bad news about poria is that it's hidden and it
spreads fast, but once you find it, it can be controlled," said
Wayne Wilcox. Earlier control recommendations called for the removal
of decayed wood and all sound wood within 2 feet of obvious visible
growth on the assumption that poria, once established, can decay
wood with metabolic water as the sole source of moisture. Poria
Incrassata is more sensitive to higher temperatures than most decaying
fungi and is killed in moist wood at temperatures only moderately
above "air-temperature maxima". This explains why poria occurs in
the more protected parts of structure and not in wood exposed to
full sun. Poria is extremely sensitive to drying. In naturally infected
wood, it can survive only 32 days of air drying. In laboratory tests,
all artificial infections were dead in 1 day at 10% RH (relative
humidity), 5 days at 65%, and 10 days at 90%. Sensitivity to drying,
in conjunction with the need for conducted-water, forms the basis
for the presently recommended simplified control and remediation
measures. Call GDS
Environmental Group" (818) 624-6732 to service it safely
and effectively. |