Yes. All chemical changes conserve mass.
the compost turns into monkeys
There are many ways. In many cases people can drive less by car pooling, taking mass transit, walking or riding a bike to work. In the home, using less air conditioning is a second way to conserve less energy.
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.
Yes, compost soil can conduct electricity. The condition of electricity draws upon ions and nutrients. Dark-colored, fresh-smelling, nutrient-rich organic matter such as compost and humus have both.
Carbon is the source of energy in a compost pile. Compost piles need to have brown and green materials, which are respectively carbon- and nitrogen-rich. Green materials provide the pile's decomposition-friendly micro-organisms with proteins.
Compost - or humus.
YES! you can compost it and use it for fertilizer!
rotting wood or compost piles
The spinal cord is part of vertebrate anatomy. It has nothing to do with "compost" which is made of rotting plant material.
Fungi and bacteria
Dead and decaying plant matter is called compost.
Most earwigs are omnivorous, and include vegetation, meat and rotting material in their diet so contribute to the composting process. They will be attracted to compost as a source of food.
Compost is a nothing more than a mixture of brown and green materials that is left to rot and is turned to keep the mixture heated up in the center and provide the necessary oxygen to the 'rotting material' to futher the rotting or composting of the materials. You can use a mixture of green grass clippings and dried leaves, kitchen scraps, newspaper, etc..... do not compost meat scraps, grease or bones.
Yes, the rotting of compost is a chemical reaction. It involves the breakdown of organic matter by microorganisms through processes such as decomposition, fermentation, and oxidation, which result in the release of nutrients and the formation of humus.
Millipedes live in damp, dark places like compost piles, under rotting leaves, in cracks, and under logs.
Millipedes live in damp, dark places like compost piles, under rotting leaves, in cracks, and under logs.
Millipedes live in damp, dark places like compost piles, under rotting leaves, in cracks, and under logs.