10 Most Common Mushroom Contaminations (Ultimate Identification & Prevention Guide)
If you’ve ever opened a jar expecting healthy white mycelium — only to find green mould, sour smells, or strange colours — you’re not alone. Mushroom contamination is the #1 reason growers fail, especially when working with agar plates, grain spawn, or bulk substrate.
The frustrating part? Contamination often appears after days or weeks of progress, wiping out your entire grow.
Here’s the good news: contamination is predictable, identifiable, and preventable.
In this guide, you’ll learn:
What is mushroom contamination?
Mushroom contamination occurs when unwanted organisms — such as mould, bacteria, or yeast contamination — invade your grow and compete with mushroom mycelium.
Why Contamination Happens
Contaminants like Trichoderma and bacteria reproduce faster than mushroom mycelium. They:
This is why early detection is critical.
Healthy vs Contaminated Mycelium (Visual Identification Guide)
Healthy Mycelium Characteristics
Contaminated Mycelium Signs
Quick Identification Table (Featured Snippet Optimised)
|
Contaminant |
Colour |
Texture |
Growth Speed |
Smell |
Common Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Green |
Powdery |
Fast |
Musty |
Grain/Bulk |
|
|
Grey |
Wispy |
Very Fast |
Mild |
Fruiting |
|
|
Yellow/Brown |
Slimy |
Medium |
Sour |
Grain |
|
|
Black |
Dusty |
Medium |
Musty |
Any |
|
|
Blue-Green |
Powdery |
Fast |
Musty |
Any |
|
|
Red/Orange |
Patchy |
Fast |
Neutral |
Grain |
|
|
Cream |
Smooth |
Medium |
Fermented |
Agar/Grain |
|
|
Pink |
Fuzzy |
Fast |
Mild |
Bulk |
|
|
Orange |
Wet blobs |
Medium |
Sweet/Rotten |
Fruiting |
|
|
White with black tips |
Tall, fuzzy with pinheads |
Fast |
Mild to musty |
Agar / Grain spawn |
The 10 Most Common Mushroom Contaminations
1. Trichoderma (Green Mould Contamination)

Trichoderma is the most common and destructive contamination in mushroom cultivation.
Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
In real grows, Trichoderma often appears right before full colonisation, when growers become less cautious.
2. Cobweb Mould (Dactylium Contamination)

Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
Early treatment with hydrogen peroxide can stop it.
3. Wet Spot / Sour Rot (Bacillus/Bacterial Contamination)

Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
If you’re unsure whether a jar is bacterial, give it a shake — healthy mycelium will recover quickly, but Bacillus-contaminated grain will stall or appear greasy and clumped.
4. Black Mould (Aspergillus Contamination)

Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
If you see black mold repeatedly, it’s often an environmental issue, not a technique issue — check your grow room, not just your process.
Can be harmful to inhale — handle carefully.
5. Blue-Green Mould (Penicillium)

Often confused with Trichoderma.
Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
Penicillium appears more blue and dusty earlier than Trichoderma — spotting this early can save nearby cultures.
6. Lipstick Mould (Neurospora)

Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
Lipstick mold spreads extremely fast — if you see even a small patch, assume the entire batch is compromised.
7. Yeast Mould

Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
Yeast often goes unnoticed because it’s not fuzzy — if growth looks “wet” or creamy instead of fibrous, suspect yeast..
8. Pink Mould (Fusarium)

Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
Fusarium can linger in your grow space — recurring outbreaks usually mean your environment needs deep cleaning, not just better technique..
9. Wet Bubble Disease (Mycogone)

Identification:
Common In:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
Unlike most contaminants, Mycogone deforms mushrooms instead of just competing with mycelium — if your fruits look mutated, suspect it immediately.
10. Pin Mould Contamination (Mucor)

Identification:
Common In:
Mucor spores are everywhere in the environment, making it one of the most frequent contaminants in:
Why It Happens:
Prevention:
Expert Tip:
Pin mold often tricks growers early on — if growth suddenly “reaches upward” instead of spreading outward, it’s not mycelium.
Contamination by Grow Stage (Critical for Ranking)
Agar Plate Contamination
Usually caused by poor sterile technique.
Grain Spawn Contamination
Most common failure point for beginners.
Bulk Substrate Contamination
Often caused by airflow and humidity imbalance.
How to Prevent Mushroom Contamination (Pro-Level)
1. Master Sterile Technique
2. Perfect Your Sterilisation
3. Control Moisture Levels
4. Improve Airflow & Filtration
5. Reduce Exposure
Advanced Grower Insights (E-E-A-T Boost)
From practical cultivation experience:
Conclusion
Mushroom contamination isn’t random — it’s predictable, identifiable, and preventable.
By understanding the 10 most common mushroom contaminations, learning how to identify contaminated mycelium, and applying strict sterile techniques, you dramatically increase your success rate.
If you remember one thing:
Clean technique + early detection = more contamination-free grows.
Master that, and your yields will follow.
Struggling With Contamination? .. there’s an Easier Way
Even with perfect sterile technique, contamination can still happen. Airborne spores, hidden bacteria, and tiny mistakes during inoculation are often enough to ruin an entire batch.
That’s exactly why many growers — especially beginners — hit a wall.
You can follow every rule… and still lose jars.
Introducing the Contam Buster (Your Contamination Safety Net)
If you’re tired of guessing whether your process is clean enough, the Contam Buster was designed to remove that uncertainty with the power of AI.
It will enable you to:
- Reduce contamination risk during inoculation.
- Create a cleaner working environment instantly.
- Improve success rates with agar, grain spawn, and bulk substrate.
- Grow with confidence — even as a beginner.
Why It Matters
Most contamination doesn’t come from obvious mistakes — it comes from invisible exposure:
What will it tell me?
It will give you:
- A diagnosis of most probable contamination (or healthy mycelium).
- A level of confidence in the diagnosis.
- Visual Indicators.
- Probable Causes.
- Recommended Action.
- Prevention Strategy (for next time).
- Other possibilities considered.
The Contam Buster tackles the root problem: your environment.
Who Is It For?
The Contam Buster is ideal if you:
Stop Losing Batches
Every contaminated grow costs you:
Instead of constantly troubleshooting, you can focus on what actually matters — healthy, aggressive mycelium and consistent harvests.
Check out Contam Buster.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does contaminated mycelium look like?
Contaminated mycelium often shows unusual colours like green, black, pink, or orange instead of bright white. It may appear slimy, patchy, or produce a sour smell. Healthy mycelium is consistently white, thick, and fast-growing.
What is the most common contamination in mushroom cultivation?
Trichoderma (green mould) is the most common contamination. It spreads rapidly and thrives in poorly sterilized substrates, often overtaking grain spawn and bulk substrate within days.
How do you stop mushroom contamination?
You prevent contamination by using sterile technique, properly sterilizing substrates, controlling moisture levels, and minimizing exposure to airborne spores during inoculation and colonisation stages.
Why does my grain spawn keep getting contaminated?
Grain spawn contamination is usually caused by excess moisture, incomplete sterilisation, or poor inoculation practices. Ensuring correct hydration and pressure cooking at 15 PSI significantly reduces contamination risk.
Can you save a contaminated mushroom grow?
In most cases, contaminated grows cannot be saved. Removing them quickly is essential to prevent spores from spreading and infecting other mushroom cultures.