Worm Farming Reference Data

~Worm Farming Reference Data~NPK Nutrient values for some common worm foods

High N:
Blood Meal (NPK 13-1-0)
Coffee grounds (NPK 1,99-0,36-0,67)
Felt (NPK 14-0-0)
Hair (NPK 14-0-0)
Tea grounds (NPK 4,15-0,62-0,4)
Worm Meal (dried & ground worms) NPK 10-1-1
Greens, leaves & meals, alfalfa, stinging nettle

High P:
Bone Meal generic NPK 4-21-0,2
* steamed NPK 13-15-13
* burned NPK 0-34,7-0
Shrimp Waste NPK 2,87-9,95-0
Tea Leaves ash NPK 0-1,66-0,4
Wheat bran NPK 2,65-2,9-1,6
Oats, Chicken Manure

High K:
Banana skin NPK 0-3,08-11,74
Molasses NPK 0,7-0-5,32
Potato skin NPK 0-5,15-27,5
Wood Ash NPK 0-0,15-7,0
Wood ash (broadleaf) K 10%
Wood ash (coniferous) K 6%
Alfalfa, ashes, potato wastes, peel & skin (-ashes, too)

High Calcium:
Poultry manure (0,5-0,7% dry), dolomite lime, egg shells, bone meal
Note that its usually thought that worm castings is high in calcium(perhaps with the presumption that lime or eggshells are added duringthe process).

High Iron:
Stinging nettle (Also high N)

High Magnesium:
Dolomite lime, poultry manure, epsom salts


Vermicomposting by Numbers

Facts from a technical compost quide, section 'Vermi-stabilization' (of composted communal waste). (Komposti, WSOY 1984).

They are talking about the red wriggler Eisenia Fetida:

  • Optimum pH range 5-8. The worms die under pH 4,5 and over pH 9.

  • Optimum Humidity 80-85%.

  • Dissolved salt leves should not exceed 0,5 % (5000 ppm?).Ammoniumacetate is toxic to the worms when concentrations exceed 0,1%(1000ppm).

  • Greatest growth rate in temperatures between 20 and 25 Cdegrees, greatest feeding rate in 15-20 C degrees. Temperatures above37 C degrees cause worm deaths. Can adapt to live in temperatures closeto 0 C degree.

  • "Its been theorized that with optimum temperatures andsufficient food source the worms would achieve maturity in 5-9 weeks,meaning that a population of 100 worms could produce an offspringpopulation of 250 000 worms in a year."

  • "..up to 20% of the waste materials weight can becomewormbiomass ." (worm biomass is the worms themselves, not the wormcastings)

  • "The will never be a problem with overproduction of worm-biomass, as the worms can always be dried and ground to produce a plantfertilizer. The NPK value of the dried worms is approxemately 10-1-1.The worm-biomass also contains 0,8% sulphur, 0,6% calcium, 0,3%magnesium and minerals that benefit the growth of plants."



Worm Species Data

Eisenia fetida (foetida)/Eisenia andrei
Common names: redworm, tiger worm, manure worm

Maximum reproduction under ideal condtions:
3.8 cocoons per adult per week
83.2% hatching success rate
3.3 hatchlings per cocoon
Net reproduction of 10.4 young per adult per week

Maximum growth rate under ideal conditions:
32-73 days to cocoon hatch
53-76 days to sexual maturity
85-149 days from egg to maturity

Temperature requirements °C (°F):
Minimum 3°C (38°F)
Maximum 35°C (95°F)
Ideal range 21-27°C (70-80°F)

Eisenia hortensis (Dendrobaena veneta)
Common names: Belgian nightcrawler, European nightcrawler

Maximum growth rate under ideal conditions:
40-128 days to cocoon hatch
57-86 days to sexual maturity
97-214 days from egg to maturity

Temperature requirements °C (°F):
Minimum 3°C (38°F)
Maximum 32°C (90°F)
Ideal 15-21°C (60-70°F)

Heat tolerance is dependant on moisture level. This worm is verytolerant of environmental fluctuation and handling, but has a slowerreproductive rate and requires very high moisture levels, relative toother worm species.


Other common composting worm species

Bimastos tumidus - often found in compost piles, tolerates mediumC:N ratios and cooler temperatures better than Eisenia foetida ,multiplies rapidly in old straw and spoiled hay, hardy to Z-5 and willsurvive in ordinary soil conditions hence once established it wouldsurvive without extensive preparations. Earthworm Ecology andBiogeography in North America

Eudrilus eugeniae: (African nightcrawler) do well but cannot withstand low temperatures.(composter or surface worker species)

Lumbricus rubellus: (common redworm or red marsh worm), used inCuba's vermicomposting program, (composter or surface worker species),native to U.S.

Lumbricus terrestris: nightcrawler, native to U.S. Not suitable for vermiculture.

Perionyx excavatus: (Asian species) do well but cannot withstand low temperatures. (composter or surface worker species).

 

These Documents contain information gathered from many Online Communities and all possible references have been given to the authors of each individual article. For any discrepancies in this please contact "overgrow2@gmail.com" ....ps enjoy