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worm composting vermicomposting vermiculture
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vermiculture,the practice of feeding organis waste to earthworms to decompose and compos food waste ... and .. for human consumption ...
The branches of agricultural arts are horticulture, aquaculture, dairy farming, organic farming, poultry, vermiculture and market gardening.
Compost in the regular way or increase the capacity of your vermiculture.
Vermiculture composting involves using worms to break down organic matter added to the compost. As such, there are no "diseases" in the compost.However one source cautioned to not let dogs or cats use the compost pile for urination and defecation, since animal wastes *could* add harmful bacteria that can colonize in the heat and nutrient-rich environment of a compost pile.
The English prefix vermi- comes from the Latin word vermis, for worm. A popular application of the prefix is in the term vermicomposting and vermiculture. Both terms refer to the breakdown of compostable materials, such as kitchen scraps and yard wastes, by way of worms.
sericulture, ostreiculture, stirpiculture, pomiculture, zooculture, horticulture, arboriculture, silviculture, sericiculture, counterculture, pisciculture, polyculture, viniculture, sylviculture, aquaculture, permaculture, subculture, electroculture, vermiculture, floriculture, aviculture, viticulture, agriculture, coculture, aquiculture, monoculture, mariculture, apiculture
Vermicomposting means composting with worms. It is taking vegetable scraps and grass clippings and adding worms. The worms break this down and make it into great fertilizer for your garden. The only disadvantage is the time and effort to do the vermicomposting.
The return to the soil of what's taken away is why vermicomposting helps in the conservation of the environment. Vermicomposting describes the use of worms to break down certain materials such as shredded paper and kitchen scraps. The materials pass through the worms' bodies. They're eliminated as nutrient rich droppings, which become part of the soil.The organic content of droppings encourages the passage of air and water through soil. So soil ends up being a better environment for the critters of the soil food web and for plants. It likewise ends up being less likely to compact and erode. So the resources within the soil are put to best use instead of becoming inaccessible through compaction or erosion.
Yes you can. However, the high fibre content of rabbit feces will make them difficult to be processed in a wastewater plant. If you flush to a septic pit it will soon become clogged with undigested fibre. We installed a WWTPlant for a small 150 rabbit farm and the septic tank became clogged in barely two weeks. The best solution to rabbit waste processing is vermiculture. Let the worms eart and digest them, and turn it into fertilizer.