Worms eat away at Air Force's waste.(News)(Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio)

Waste News, February, 2003 by Geiselman, Bruce

Byline: Bruce Geiselman Wright-Patterson Air Force Base has put a new group of recruits in charge of food waste disposal, and they've managed to cut costs dramatically. But all these recruits do is eat, reproduce and turn out rich compost. The base launched a vermicomposting program in July, using earthworms to consume a daily average of 500 pounds of solid waste.

The worms digest vegetable matter and old newspapers. That saves the base about $25 per day on transporting and disposing of waste. As the number of worms grows, so does the amount of waste they consume. The base acquired 250,000 worms and their climate-controlled home at no cost from another base that found it didn't produce enough food waste to satisfy the little guys'...

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