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Airborne culturable fungi in naturally ventilated primary school environments in a subtropical climate

Authors :
Salonen, Heidi
Duchaine, Caroline
Mazaheri, Mandana
Clifford, Sam
Morawska, Lidia
Salonen, Heidi
Duchaine, Caroline
Mazaheri, Mandana
Clifford, Sam
Morawska, Lidia
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

There is currently a lack of reference values for indoor air fungal concentrations to allow for the interpretation of measurement results in subtropical school settings. Analysis of the results of this work established that, in the majority of properly maintained subtropical school buildings, without any major affecting events such as floods or visible mould or moisture contamination, indoor culturable fungi levels were driven by outdoor concentration. The results also allowed us to benchmark the “baseline range” concentrations for total culturable fungi, Penicillium spp., Cladosporium spp. and Aspergillus spp. in such school settings. The measured concentration of total culturable fungi and three individual fungal genera were estimated using Bayesian hierarchical modelling. Pooling of these estimates provided a predictive distribution for concentrations at an unobserved school. The results indicated that “baseline” indoor concentration levels for indoor total fungi, Penicillium spp., Cladosporium spp. and Aspergillus spp. in such school settings were generally 1450, 680, 480 and 90 cfu/m3 , respectively, and elevated levels would indicate mould damage in building structures. The indoor/outdoor ratio for most classrooms had 95% credible intervals containing 1, indicating that fungi concentrations are generally the same indoors and outdoors at each school. Bayesian fixed effects regression modelling showed that increasing both temperature and humidity resulted in higher levels of fungi concentration.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
Régions tropicales, application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1263620242
Document Type :
Electronic Resource