True enough, generally, reaction rates tend to increase as temperature increases. It could be oxidation by the air, or some other contaminant, besides microbes. I just figure your fungus is metabolizing something and it's products are low pH -- doesn't that seem likely, especially compared to frozen samples?
Eum, so you think that if I kept the samples airtight I might not have seen this drastical reduction in pH? (ex.=> 1 sample kept closed from the air, the other one maybe opened once during 5 monhts in sterile conditions).
Meaning that the sample kept closed would not change so fast in pH?
What you say about : True enough, generally, reaction rates tend to increase as temperature increases. I agree with that, the temperature does influence the speed of a reaction.
I just figure your fungus is metabolizing something and it's products are low pH
==> true too, but how come I only see this when PEG is used ? Why not when I use sucrose or another substance ?
If have more samples then the ones with PEG and I only noticed it in the samples filled with PEG thus meaning that the PEG does have a big influence in the pH change.
Or there has to be some sort of specific interaction between the fungus as PEG ?
I just figure your fungus is metabolizing something and it's products are low pH -- doesn't that seem likely, especially compared to frozen samples?
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eum, true too, the samples stored by lower temperature do not show a lower pH, so it could indeed be that the growth of the fungus is influencing the pH change, but then how do you explain this: the fungus grows better (and faster) when stored at 5°C ! And not when stored at 20°C!
Dont you think this is strange then?
Anyway, I am not a chemist , so I might make big mistakes or make assumptions that are completely wrong. I am just trying to figure it out.