Effect of Feeding Regime on Composting in Bins

Composting in bins is one of the most practical home composting methods. There is currently a need for greater information to improve the management of the composting process and to create home composting programs, which ensure sustainable production of high quality compost. This study investigates how two aspects of the bin feeding regime—the feeding frequency and the amount of waste applied at each feed—influence the process's evolution and the quality of the compost. Compost bins were assayed after introducing the same amount of kitchen and garden waste according to three different frequencies: in a single batch, weekly, or every 3 weeks. A fourth treatment was applied to calculate the potential waste reduction achieved by the composting process, filling the bins to the brim on a weekly basis. Temperature, mass, and volume changes; the microbial diversity (by Biolog); and gas emissions (CO2, CH4, N2O, and NH3) were all determined during the process. At the end of the experiment, all of the composts were weighed and characterized. Results show that the main differences were very dependent on the quantity of waste provided. Large amounts of waste were added increasing the compost's temperature and maturity during the process, while slightly affecting the salinity and phytotoxicity of the final compost but without any clear effects on microbial diversity and gas emission. Therefore, from a technical point of view, the shared use of compost bins among several households (community composting) is preferable to individual use.

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Main Authors: Storino, F., Menéndez, Sergio, Muro, Julio, Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro María, Irigoyen, Ignacio
Format: artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/191399
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spelling dig-idab-es-10261-1913992019-09-27T11:03:14Z Effect of Feeding Regime on Composting in Bins Storino, F. Menéndez, Sergio Muro, Julio Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro María Irigoyen, Ignacio Composting in bins is one of the most practical home composting methods. There is currently a need for greater information to improve the management of the composting process and to create home composting programs, which ensure sustainable production of high quality compost. This study investigates how two aspects of the bin feeding regime—the feeding frequency and the amount of waste applied at each feed—influence the process's evolution and the quality of the compost. Compost bins were assayed after introducing the same amount of kitchen and garden waste according to three different frequencies: in a single batch, weekly, or every 3 weeks. A fourth treatment was applied to calculate the potential waste reduction achieved by the composting process, filling the bins to the brim on a weekly basis. Temperature, mass, and volume changes; the microbial diversity (by Biolog); and gas emissions (CO2, CH4, N2O, and NH3) were all determined during the process. At the end of the experiment, all of the composts were weighed and characterized. Results show that the main differences were very dependent on the quantity of waste provided. Large amounts of waste were added increasing the compost's temperature and maturity during the process, while slightly affecting the salinity and phytotoxicity of the final compost but without any clear effects on microbial diversity and gas emission. Therefore, from a technical point of view, the shared use of compost bins among several households (community composting) is preferable to individual use. Peer reviewed 2019-09-23T15:19:23Z 2019-09-23T15:19:23Z 2017 artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 Compost Science and Utilization 25(2): 71-81 (2017) 1065-657X http://hdl.handle.net/10261/191399 10.1080/1065657X.2016.1202794 2326-2397 en https://doi.org/10.1080/1065657X.2016.1202794 Sí none Taylor & Francis
institution IDAB ES
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country España
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libraryname Biblioteca del IDAB España
language English
description Composting in bins is one of the most practical home composting methods. There is currently a need for greater information to improve the management of the composting process and to create home composting programs, which ensure sustainable production of high quality compost. This study investigates how two aspects of the bin feeding regime—the feeding frequency and the amount of waste applied at each feed—influence the process's evolution and the quality of the compost. Compost bins were assayed after introducing the same amount of kitchen and garden waste according to three different frequencies: in a single batch, weekly, or every 3 weeks. A fourth treatment was applied to calculate the potential waste reduction achieved by the composting process, filling the bins to the brim on a weekly basis. Temperature, mass, and volume changes; the microbial diversity (by Biolog); and gas emissions (CO2, CH4, N2O, and NH3) were all determined during the process. At the end of the experiment, all of the composts were weighed and characterized. Results show that the main differences were very dependent on the quantity of waste provided. Large amounts of waste were added increasing the compost's temperature and maturity during the process, while slightly affecting the salinity and phytotoxicity of the final compost but without any clear effects on microbial diversity and gas emission. Therefore, from a technical point of view, the shared use of compost bins among several households (community composting) is preferable to individual use.
format artículo
author Storino, F.
Menéndez, Sergio
Muro, Julio
Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro María
Irigoyen, Ignacio
spellingShingle Storino, F.
Menéndez, Sergio
Muro, Julio
Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro María
Irigoyen, Ignacio
Effect of Feeding Regime on Composting in Bins
author_facet Storino, F.
Menéndez, Sergio
Muro, Julio
Aparicio-Tejo, Pedro María
Irigoyen, Ignacio
author_sort Storino, F.
title Effect of Feeding Regime on Composting in Bins
title_short Effect of Feeding Regime on Composting in Bins
title_full Effect of Feeding Regime on Composting in Bins
title_fullStr Effect of Feeding Regime on Composting in Bins
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Feeding Regime on Composting in Bins
title_sort effect of feeding regime on composting in bins
publisher Taylor & Francis
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/191399
work_keys_str_mv AT storinof effectoffeedingregimeoncompostinginbins
AT menendezsergio effectoffeedingregimeoncompostinginbins
AT murojulio effectoffeedingregimeoncompostinginbins
AT apariciotejopedromaria effectoffeedingregimeoncompostinginbins
AT irigoyenignacio effectoffeedingregimeoncompostinginbins
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