Here is a fairly technical discussion of the use of LAB for MLF:
Lactic Acid Bacteria Contribution to Wine Quality and Safety Much of this article is over my head, but I can pick out a few useful tidbits by skimmig through the article.
Different species of LAB (Lactobacillus) are used to produce yogurt, sauerkraut, kimchee, or MLF in wine. Many eat carbohyrates to produce lactic acid. Some eat malic acid, which are the ones used for MLF.
Thanks, Raptor. Having already read most of the Lallemand book excerpts made it easier for me to read and at least partially understand the article you linked to. For me some of the most important information in the Lallemand book related to the contribution that LAB can make, or not make, to volatile acidity (VA), depending both on the particular LAB type chosen for the MLF, but equally important the conditions into which it is introduced when you inoculate.
The Lallemand book discusses in some detail the effects of the variation in timing of when the LAB is introduced; not just co-fermentation vs. sequential, but also, for co-fermentation, exactly when -- i.e., at what stage of the progress of the AF -- you inoculate. The way I read it (though I may have gotten it wrong) is that it is generally not a good idea to inoculate for co-fermentation be simultaneous of immediately after inoculating with the yeast. Rather, the LAB should be introduced later
during the alcoholic fermentation; and even there there are pros and cons as to exactly when, esp. wrt production of VA, which we want to avoid. pH is also critical, as well as temperature. The bottom line is that the chemistry of the LAB acting on the wine during MLF can differ depending on the conditions and so the MLF can cause the wine become better or worse in terms of flavors and aromas, depending on those conditions, in part depending on the specific types of yeast and LAB used.
Complex subject, but according to my commercial winemaking friend from the other forum who put me on to the Lallemand document, he has been able to significantly improve his wines, reduce VA, and win more "Golds" for his California wines in part by modifying his approach to MLF. One very specific thing he mentioned was that his winery is now co-fermenting all of their reds "whenever possible" so as to "leave nothing to chance". That, he said, was because through testing they found that in about 33% of the reds MLF had already started during AF even though they had not yet inoculated for MLF. So the implication is that the LAB that had spontaneously begun the MLF during AF may not have been a desirable one.
P.S. I liked what I saw in the Lallemand excerpts that I wound up ordering the whole book from someone on Ebay that was selling it for $17. The only other way to get it is directly from Lallemand, and I'm guessing you might have to be a commercial winery to get it from them, at least for free.