| Themes > Science > Botanical Sciences > Plant Hormones, Nutrition, and Transport > Compost Pile |
Compost is a gardener's best friend. It provides nutrients and a healthy soil for plants. How is compost made? With the help of microbes! How do microbes make compost? They eat grass and leaves and kitchen scraps and virtually any other organic material and convert these into humus by a process known as biodegradation. Composting is a process that microbes have been doing for billions of years, long before humans began gathering leaves into piles. Forest floors are major composting centers every fall when the leaves pile up. Thermophiles Have you ever noticed that some compost piles get so hot that they give off steam? The microbes that live in hot compost piles are heat lovers called "Thermophiles." Bacillus stearothermophilus spore Some compost piles are hot, and others are cool. Both hot piles and cool piles will create compost. However, hot compost piles degrade material more quickly than cool piles. Compost piles heat up for the same reason that you heat up when you do lots of exercise. Your metabolism speeds up. Like your muscles, the cells of microbes in a compost heap are working hard and are using lots of fuel (banana skins, grass, leaves, etc.) When they use lots of fuel, heat is given off as a by product. This heat kills many microbes, (just like too high a fever will kill you). However, some microbes like the heat. These thermophiles can live at temperatures above 45 degrees centigrade. Some thermophiles like it really, really hot. They are called hyperthermophiles. Some hyperthermophiles can live at temperatures above the boiling point! Ouch! Fungi
Conidiospores of Mold on Banana Plastic Eating Microbes? Styrofoam is a type of plastic. Will Styrofoam cups turn to compost? Can any plastic items be turned into compost? It depends on the type of plastic. Styrofoam Eating Microbes Alcaligenes eutrophus If you put plastic on your compost pile, will it disappear? The answer is: it depends on the kind of plastic. Some plastics are biodegradable. Biodegradable means that organisms can degrade the material. Most human made (synthetic) plastics are NOT biodegradable. This is why when you put a Styrofoam cup on your compost pile it does not turn into compost, but instead just sits there. |
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