
Cultivation supplies
by 3M
3M Micropore Tape is a breathable, perforated surgical tape that mushroom growers repurpose as a gas exchange filter for spawn jars and grain containers. At 2.5 cm wide and 9.1 metres long, a single roll covers dozens of jar lids before you need a replacement. Stick a strip over your injection port or air hole, and you get the airflow your mycelium needs without letting contaminants waltz in.
Mushroom mycelium needs two things from its environment: humidity and fresh air exchange (FAE). Seal a jar completely and your spawn suffocates in its own CO2. Leave it open and every mould spore in your kitchen gets an invitation. Micropore tape threads the needle — its tiny perforations allow oxygen and CO2 to pass through while acting as a physical barrier against airborne contaminants.
We've seen growers try all sorts of improvised filters: cotton wool stuffed into holes, coffee filters held on with rubber bands, even cling film with pin pricks. Most of these either restrict airflow too much or don't filter finely enough. Micropore tape sits flat, sticks reliably, and tears cleanly by hand — no scissors needed. It's the kind of product that costs almost nothing but saves you from losing an entire batch to contamination.
One honest limitation: micropore tape is not a sterile barrier in the way a HEPA filter is. According to a study published in PMC, "the lack of antimicrobial activity confirms that Micropore tape should not be relied upon to suppress microbial proliferation; its role remains mechanical" (PMC12969583). Translation: it physically blocks particles but doesn't kill anything. That means your sterile technique still matters — gloves, a still air box, and wiping surfaces with isopropyl alcohol. The tape is your last line of defence, not your only one.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Brand | 3M |
| Width | 2.5 cm (approx. 1 inch) |
| Length | 9.1 metres (approx. 10 yards) |
| Material | Non-woven microporous paper |
| Adhesive type | Hypoallergenic, pressure-sensitive |
| Colour | White |
| Tearable by hand | Yes |
| Originally designed for | Surgical dressings and medical use |
| Mycology application | Gas exchange filter for spawn jars, grain bags, and agar plates |
| SKU | SH0133 |
Complete your cultivation setup with Adherable Lid Filters — purpose-built filter discs that sit directly on mason jar lids for a more permanent gas exchange solution. Pair with a Magic Mushroom Grow Kit for a ready-to-fruit setup, or grab a pack of Sterile Substrate Jars if you prefer to inoculate from scratch.
The texture of this tape tells you a lot. Run your thumb across a strip and you can feel the slight roughness of the microporous surface — it's paper-like, not plasticky. That open weave structure is what lets water vapour and gases pass through while physically blocking particles larger than the pore size. Your spawn jar stays humid inside (mycelium loves 90%+ relative humidity at the colonisation stage) but CO2 doesn't build up to the point where growth stalls.
A single layer is usually enough for standard jar lids with a 6-10 mm hole drilled through them. Some growers double up for extra protection, especially in rooms without a HEPA filter or still air box. We'd say one layer is fine if your sterile technique is solid. Two layers if you're working in a kitchen with open windows or pets. More than two and you start restricting airflow more than necessary.
The adhesive holds well on metal lids, glass, and polypropylene containers. It does lose grip over time in high-humidity environments — if you notice edges peeling after 2-3 weeks, just peel off the old strip and apply a fresh one. At 9.1 metres per roll, you've got enough tape for roughly 30-40 jar lids (depending on hole size and how generous you are with overlap), so a single roll easily covers multiple growing projects.
The number one mistake with micropore tape isn't the tape itself — it's everything around it. Growers will carefully apply a perfect strip of tape, then open the jar lid with bare hands to check on progress. Every time you break that seal, you're rolling the dice on contamination. If you want to inspect colonisation, hold the jar up to the light. Don't open it until the substrate is fully colonised.
The second most common issue: using micropore tape on bags. It works, but not brilliantly. The tape adheres to smooth surfaces far better than to the textured polypropylene of most grow bags. For bags, impulse-sealed filter patches are a better shout. Save the micropore tape for jars, agar plates, and rigid containers where it can form a proper seal against a flat surface.
3M Micropore Tape is a breathable surgical tape with tiny perforations that allow gas exchange while blocking airborne contaminants. Mushroom growers place it over holes in jar lids to let fresh air reach colonising mycelium without exposing it to mould spores or bacteria. It's cheap, effective, and tears by hand.
One layer is enough if you're working in a clean environment with a still air box. Two layers adds extra protection in less controlled spaces. We wouldn't go beyond two — stacking more restricts the airflow your mycelium needs to colonise efficiently.
Check every 10-14 days. If the edges are peeling or the tape looks damp or discoloured, peel it off and apply a fresh strip. The 9.1-metre roll gives you plenty to work with — don't ration it at the expense of a clean seal.
You can, but it doesn't stick as well to textured polypropylene. For bags, purpose-built filter patches that are heat-sealed into the plastic work far better. Micropore tape is best on flat, smooth surfaces like metal jar lids, glass, and rigid plastic containers.
Yes — 3M originally designed it for securing wound dressings. It's hypoallergenic, breathable, and gentle on skin. Mushroom cultivators adopted it because those same properties — breathability and particle filtration — are exactly what spawn jars need for gas exchange.
No. According to research published in PMC (PMC12969583), micropore tape does not suppress microbial growth — its role is purely mechanical filtration. It blocks particles from entering but won't sterilise anything. You still need proper sterile technique alongside it.
Adherable Lid Filters are more convenient for long-term use — they're purpose-built, sit flush, and don't need replacing mid-grow. Micropore tape is more versatile and cheaper per use, and you can apply it to any container. Both do the job. We'd say lid filters for your main jars, micropore tape for everything else.
Last updated: April 2026
Medical disclaimer. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before use of any substance.