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- 13:56, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded File:Active bacteria.jpg (on the active bacteria and CO2 in the compost, include the notation that samples 2536 & 2540 were from 18” below top center of a passively aerated windrow of ‘yard waste” 10 & 16 days after the windrow was built. Sample #2541 was taken from that sa)
- 13:47, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded File:Passively aerated windrow.jpg (Courtesy of Mother Nature’s Farm in New York . < http://www.magicsoil.com/> )
- 04:29, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded File:P. stutzeri strains.JPG (Several typical colonial morphologies of P. stutzeri strains.)
- 02:59, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded File:Veggie.jpg (Mr.Crockett said "Our best health insurance is to grow and eat organic produce, vegetables. The key to healthy people, animals, a healthy environment is to abandon, stop using chemical fertilizers, pesticides and GMO’s.")
- 02:34, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded File:Lives.JPG (Overall Cycle of how compost helps different Microorganisms.)
- 02:01, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded a new version of File:Pyramid.JPG (In small-scale outdoor composting systems, such as backyard compost piles, soil invertebrates are likely to contribute to the decomposition process. Together with bacteria, fungi, and other microbes, these organisms make up a complex food web or energy py)
- 01:59, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded File:Pyramid.JPG
- 01:53, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded File:Pyarmid.JPG
- 01:07, 29 August 2008 Nnaidu talk contribs uploaded File:Microorg-temp.gif (Figure 1 Different communities of microorganisms predominate during the various composting phases. Starting decomposition carried by mesophilic microorganisms, which rapidly break down the soluble, readily degradable compounds. Temperature rises above 40�)