Ah this is definitely the most accurate and comprehensive write-up on the composting process I have seen to date - thanks for sharing!
the simple preface of the highlighted statement from you is a perfectly valid reason to age the soil.
the added ewc is a type of inoculation, and the majority of those bacterial microbes will likely not be found in the prebagged soil, so you'll have a much better foundation of a living soil after that.
Absolutely! - seems I missed that too on my first reading of the question.
Also, that includes not just bacteria, but the whole team of decomposers and predators needed to get nutirent cycling going.
A few things I feel need straightening out from the posts in this thread for the sake of conceptual accuracy:
Chemistry
follows the biology.
The chemical composition (which, granted, is what we
can assess rather reliably at the present moment) actually is just a
symptom of the biological process (which, granted, is extremely diversified and which we only have a vague notion of at this point... or ever? considering the estimated number of
species is rocketing upwards, not quite up-to-date estimates lying at 75K for bacteria and 25K for fungi, nevermind individual adaptation to specific environments, where microbes actively can change their DNA..!).
The actual initiating force is always going to be microbial activity and interaction. So while we do depend on the chemical findings, we need to remember that is not the actual causal force. We're just following shadows of the real thing
Also, when our compost has this and that in chemical terms (usually an analysis of
total nutrients), those nutes are actually tied up in the tiny microbe bodies and only get released when they get eaten by higher-trophic microbes with lower nutrient needs (=nutrient cycling). That's the reason compost doesn't leach nutes the way inorganic ferts just percolate straight through the soil into our rivers.
Take for example nitrogen, whose cycle has been studied. Bacteria have a very narrow C:N ratio of like 10. They get eaten by, say, an amoeba with C:N needs of like 30, so the extra nitrogen is released as poop into the rhizosphere, where it will be taken up by the plant. And the plant makes sure only those nutes it needs are in this soluble form at any time - by releasing exudates that will promote the growth of those microbes that can mine the nutrients required.
So when you go to analyse the
soluble (=directly plant-available) nutes in a compost, they will be very low level.
Most of the magic is in the microbes. And if the composting went well, they are going to be
aerobic and more of the foods consumed will be stored in their bodies (as opposed to gassing off as happens with
anaerobic microbial activity).
And the same principles of course apply to the microbes in a prebagged soil, in our pots, and gardens.