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Vermicompost can be mixed directly into the soil, or mixed with water to make a liquid fertilizer known as worm tea. The light brown waste liquid, or leachate, that drains into the bottom of some vermicomposting systems is not to be confused with worm tea. It is an uncomposted byproduct from when water-rich foods break down and may contain ...
Domestic sewage vermifilter showing accumulated contents (composting worms exposed) A vermifilter (also vermi-digester or lumbrifilter) is an aerobic treatment system, consisting of a biological reactor containing media that filters organic material from wastewater.
This is a list of composting systems: Home composting (small-scale) ... Vermicomposting; Industrial composting (large-scale) ... Waste sorting;
Vermifilter toilet, also known as a primary vermifilter, vermidigester toilet, tiger toilet [1] [2] or tiger worm toilet, [3] is an on-site sanitation system in which human excreta are delivered from a toilet (usually by flushing) onto a medium containing a worm-based ecosystem.
Worms Eat My Garbage: How to Set Up & Maintain a Worm Composting System is a book by Mary Appelhof self-published in 1982 under the company name Flower Press. The book is still held as seminal reading in the field of vermicomposting. [1] [2] [3] [4]
Healthy population of red wigglers in a vermicomposting bin. Vermicomposting is a common practice in permaculture. The practice involves using earthworms, such as red wigglers, to break down green and brown waste. The worms produce worm castings, which can be used to organically fertilize the garden.
Home composting pile with added kitchen waste. There are various types of organic waste that can be used to compost at home. Composting requires two types of organic materials: "green" waste and "brown" waste. [7] This is due to organic waste requiring four elements to decompose: nitrogen, carbon, oxygen, and water.
The need for public institutions addressing environmental issues in Nigeria became a necessity in the aftermath of the 1988 toxic waste affair in Koko, Nigeria. [9] This prompted the government, led by President Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, to promulgate Decree 58 of 1988, establishing the Federal Environmental Protection Agency (FEPA) as the country's environmental watchdog.