No because shrimps shells do not rot they simply stay as they are xxx
you can make compost out of old food that is too old to eat. you can also put in old fruit and vegetable peelings of crumbled egg shells. also, a layer of newspaper every month does your compost well.
yes
Yes they can! Put them in the freezer until garbage day oe use them for stock.
Egg shells are acceptable candidates for compost, in organic production. They also control cutworms, slugs, and snails.
No they are not high in calcium. Shrimp shells are made of chitin, the same material insects exoskeletons, crab & lobster shells, and spider-webs are made of.
I have had luck with compost. But it depends what is in the compost, like in mine I had egg shells,and other vegetables.
Cardboard, egg shells, fruit peels, grass clippings, leaves and paper are six things that decay and that may be put in compost piles. Fruit peels and grass clippings decompose within six months while cardboard and leaves -- excepting beech and oak -- require 12 to 24 months. Egg shells take at least three years to decompose.
I think you're not meant to put fats in a compost bin because it can attract vermin. But it probably will compost.
Yes. You an compost almost any organic substance.
A conch shell is hard, cylindrical and is not jointed. A shrimp shell has many parts that move with the shrimp and provide protection. Additionally, the material that the shells are made of are entirely different. Conch shells are made primarily of a mineral called aragonite. Each layer of aragonite is reinforced by layers of protein. Shrimp shells are made of chitin, the same material insects exoskeletons, crab & lobster shells, and spiderwebs are made of.
a. How do you dispose your biodegradables? Do you bury them or put in a compost pit?
It's where you put all of the severed zombie limbs. You know, during the zombie apocalypse. They make great fertilizer, just be sure to remove the shotgun shells!