kitchen wastes
Over
materials that cannot be used more than once are called disposable wastes.
decomposers
No
Yes, bacteria is a decomposer. Any remains of a dead animal ( the died body) not eaten yet by a consumer, is broken down by bacteria ( the decomposer) and fungi that live in the soil.Yes, bacteria is a decomposer because it eats wastes.
Bacteria are ubiquitous / omnipresent in every habitat on Earth, growing in soil, acidic hot springs, radioactive wastes, water, and deep in the Earth's crust, as well as in organic matter and the live bodies of plants and animals.
If you are referring to human, animal and vegetable wastes, then yes, they can be decomposed and they do this without any help from humans, due to the action of bacteria, fungi, and insects that naturally occur with these waste materials.
Use whatever is left as compost.
they used for making compost etc.............
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.
biodegradable and non-biodegradable wastes these 2 types of waste are found in a vegetable market 1) biodegradable waste : It can be decomposed ex: food waste 2) non-biodegradable waste:It cannot be decomposed ex:foams
farmers prepare manures by dumping animal dung, vegetable and crop wastes at open places and let them be decomposed by bacteria and fungi. After a month or so, the manure is ready and is mixed up with soil.
Organic Fertilizer is usally compost w/e worms and bacteria that produce waste products, in which inrich the soil. The roots of the plant suck in the nutriens from the wastes and it inriches the plant in growth.
In all bodies of water, there live micro-bacteria that need food just like us. These bacteria are not producers like plants; they cannot produce their own food. These bacteria decompose the biodegradable wastes that were dumped. When they do, they need Oxygen in order to break the wastes down into simpler molecules. Therefore, the amount of dissolved Oxygen in the river decreases.
Yes, yard wastes can be put in compost heaps.Specifically, yard waste generally designates grass clippings and leaf litter. What drops off -- or is trimmed from -- herbaceous and woody plants usually is eligible for decomposition into compost and use as amendments, fertilizers or mulches. But it must not harbor any diseases or pests.
A compost with a carbon to nitrogen ratio not in excess of 35 to 1 is the compost that has the most nutrients. Higher ratios make the compost's nitrogen inaccessible and unavailable. Yard wastes have high nitrogen and organic content and moderate calcium and phosphorus presences.
The property of organic wastes of becoming decomposed through microbial activity is known as putrescibility
bacteria,sunlight,oxygen and wastes