they break down the cellular materials, or digest it like your stomach digests food. this is the way a cow digests grass, they release heat and make nitrogen and carbon dioxide and use oxygen just like people do when they breathe, and their metabolism generates heat and carbon dioxide. :) yeast cells ferment when bread is made, they eat sugars in the bread dough and make alcohol, this causes the bread to rise from the carbon dioxide that is released, also bacteria in septic tanks yeast and enzymes also digest the paper and fecal matter, methane gas is generated, and heat is released, this is known as an exothermic reaction, which generates heat in the chemical reaction, the opposite of an endo thermic reaction where heat is needed to sustain the chemical reaction, such as sugar in iced tea, if the sugar is put in the hot tea it disolves rapidly, whereas it just lies there in the bottom of the glass when the tea is cold. :)
Microbes that make you sick are often referred to as pathogens or harmful bacteria. These microorganisms can cause infections or diseases in the human body.
Not really. Wax paper is coated with a thin layer of wax that can make it difficult for microbes to break down the paper. While it can eventually break down over a long period of time, it is not as biodegradable as other types of paper. It is better to compost or recycle wax paper when possible.
1. if there were no microbes you would die (they are essential for digestion). 2. they make things rot and replenish minerals in the soil. 3. microbes make alcohol (yummm). 4. yeast makes bread. 5. microbes are needed to make cheese. 6. microbes are needed to make yoghurt. 7. some people believe we evolved from microbes (over millions of years). 8. microbes can kill and if people don't die the world would be over populated. 9. 1/2 of the CO2 taken out of the air is because of lots of microbes called algae. 10. if you like mushrooms there spores are microbes.
The stomach defends against microbes by secreting digestive enzymes and acid that can kill many harmful pathogens. Additionally, the stomach's lining has a protective layer of mucous that helps prevent microbes from invading the stomach tissue. The acidic environment also helps to break down food to make it less hospitable for microbial growth.
There are both harmful and useful microbes. Harmful microbes like bacteria,virus and fungus can cause diseases while some useful microbes like bacteria can help in fermentation process like the yeast or as food like mushroom and many lacobacillus microbes that help in producing vitamins and in synthesis of food.Many microbes help produce antibiotic medicines. Microbes like algae are edible or help by photosynthesis to maintain the CO2 -O2 balance in the environment.
You can make microbes for composting by adding a mix of green and brown materials like food scraps, yard waste, and paper to a compost bin. The microbes will naturally break down the materials into nutrient-rich compost for your garden.
Yes, some microbes are bad
Nitrogen, carbon, microbes and water.
There are millions of microbes both on and inside of a compost pile. They start as simply organisms, but as they develop they evolve at an astonishing rate into larger, recognizable insects. Which microbes you might find depends on where the compost heap is, what stage of development it is in, who is tending to it, etc.
Fungi and bacteria
Pathogens can thrive in compost, " poisoning it for food for plants for human consumption, causing the spread of disease.
A compost heap is hot in the middle because this is where the microbes are starting to break down the material in the compost heap and as part of their process they generate heat.
The advancement of the process of breakdown of compostable materials is the way in which microbes can be useful in compost bins. The microbes in question may appear as beneficial bacteria and fungi. They decompose carbon- and nitrogen-rich recyclables and thereby generate the energy and heat which ensure efficient decomposition in less than a year.
Basically, all breakdown of compostable materials into actual compost is courtesy of microbes.
To make probiotics for plants, you can ferment organic matter like compost or manure with water and molasses. This creates a solution rich in beneficial microbes that can be sprayed on plants to promote growth and health.
Yes, sawdust can be used in compost. Anything organic can be composted, including you and other animals and paper. Cellulose is difficult to digest by your hardworking microbes so make sure to have lots of green nitrogen material mixed in with it, ie. grass clippings, manure & food waste. Make sure there is NO treated wood sawdust as this is all poisonous. HINT, but a garden fork and leave it in the compost pile at all times. this way you will automatically turn over your mix each time you visit it. This adds oxygen, as well as blending in the microbes with the materials. HINT 2, throw a few shovel fulls of topsoil or other compost as a starter. Keep the material damp like a wrung out sponge. Ray "the compost Guru".
Alternating layers of properly aerated and moistened carbon- and nitrogen-rich recyclables is the need that microbes have to build compost heaps. Dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich organic matter called compost or humus results from the consumption and excretion of dead, decaying, dying or living animal and plant matter by macro- and micro-organisms. The alternating brown- and green-colored layers will have to be turned at least once a week and supplementally watered to the consistency of a wrung-out sponge to prevent mildew, mold or wildfire and to support the temperature levels that befit proper composting.