Three Systems, One Substrate
There are three popular ways to turn kitchen scraps and yard waste into something a plant can use. They look different, smell different, take different lengths of time, and rely on completely different microbial communities. They are also all true forms of composting, even though the chemistry inside each system has almost nothing in common.
Aerobic composting is the standard pile or windrow you would see at a municipal facility or in a backyard tumbler. Mesophilic and thermophilic bacteria, plus a wide range of fungi, decompose organic matter in the presence of oxygen. The pile heats up, often above 60 degrees Celsius in the thermophilic phase, and finishes in anywhere from six weeks to six months depending on management. Turning the pile reintroduces oxygen and keeps the aerobic communities going.
Vermicomposting is what happens when you put earthworms (typically Eisenia fetida or Eisenia andrei, the red wigglers) in a bed of pre-decomposed organic matter and let them eat their way through it. The worms ingest material, the microbes inside their guts work it over, and the worms excrete castings that carry an enriched microbial community out the other end. One to three months from setup to harvestable casts. No turning. No heat. Just worms and the microbiology they carry.
Bokashi is the third one and the most different from the other two. It is a Japanese anaerobic fermentation system developed by Dr. Teruo Higa at the University of the Ryukyus in the 1980s. The active ingredient is an inoculant called Effective Microorganisms (EM), a consortium of lactic acid bacteria (Lactobacillus species), yeasts (Saccharomyces), and phototrophic bacteria (Rhodopseudomonas). The food scraps go into an airtight container with EM-inoculated bran, the container is sealed, and the consortium ferments the contents over about two weeks. The result is not finished compost. It is acidified, fermented organic matter that gets buried in soil or added to a regular compost pile to finish.
Three engines. Aerobic, vermicompost, anaerobic ferment. They share almost no microbes, run on opposite oxygen requirements, and use radically different timelines. And yet, biochar improves all three. Not by accident and not by marketing, but because the underlying mechanism is structural, and the structure works regardless of which microbes are colonizing it.