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Organic Materials Management: Compost Pile Critters Level One—Primary Consumers |
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This level is made up of herbivores: bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes, nematodes, mites, snails, slugs, earthworms, millipedes, sowbugs and worms. Note that some types of mites are carnivores. The most productive members of your compost pile's food web are the bacteria, which are chemical decomposers. As a group, they can eat nearly anything. Some are so adaptable that they can use more than a hundred different organic compounds as their source of carbon because of their ability to produce a variety of enzymes. Usually, they can produce the appropriate enzyme to digest whatever material they find themselves on. Every piece of organic matter you place in the pile is covered with varying amounts of bacteria. As they digest the organic material and break it down into its basic elements, they are also reproducing at an incredible rate. One gram of bacteria can become about 450 grams of bacteria in only three hours. There are many kinds of specialized bacteria operating in different temperature ranges.
Snails, slugs, millipedes, sow bugs, pill bugs, mites and earthworms are the larger invertebrates that shred the plant materials, creating more surface area for action by the microscopic fungi, bacteria and actinomycetes, which are in turn eaten by organisms such as mites and springtails. These creatures all excrete "castings" that are very dark and fine, and great for your plants.
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Last updated: October 17, 2008 Organic Materials Management http://www.ciwmb.ca.gov/Organics/ Contacts: http://www.ciwmb.ca.gov/Organics/Contacts.htm |