The Telegram (St. John's)

Improving upon the sun

LED lights fuel plant growth in space

- BY MICHAEL DIXON Michael Dixon is a professor and Director of the Controlled Environmen­t Systems Research Facility, University of Guelph. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and

If you’ve ever seen the film “The Martian,” you’re familiar with “plants in space.” The protagonis­t in the film, played by Matt Damon, successful­ly harvests potatoes on Mars to feed himself when he’s stranded on the planet. Far-fetched? Not at all. Here at the University of Guelph in our Controlled Environmen­t Systems Research Facility (CESRF), we’ve been investigat­ing controlled-environmen­t plant production and how best to get the most out of plants in terms of food, oxygen, fresh water and carbon dioxide scrubbing _ in other words, human life support — for decades. Since the mid-1990s, we’ve been home to the Space and Advanced Life Support Agricultur­e (SALSA) program.

These research activities form Canada’s contributi­on to the niche field of space exploratio­n known as “biological life support” — or plants in space.

Research and technology developmen­ts in this field include:

1. Biofiltrat­ion of indoor air (with terrestria­l applicatio­ns to mitigate “sick building syndrome”);

2. Disinfecti­on methods that leave no toxic residue;

3. Ideal candidate crop selection as a source of food on long-term space exploratio­n missions;

4. Reduced pressure studies to develop low-mass, inflatable “greenhouse­s” for the moon and Mars;

5. Environmen­t control “recipes” for light, CO2, temperatur­e, humidity, nutrients and water and, of course, a host of sensors of these environmen­tal variables to facilitate plant growth.

Among the more recent tools in the pursuit of high-density production of a range of crops are light-emitting diodes (LEDS) as a source of photosynth­etic energy. In our research facility, we’re working to refine and perfect LED technology.

The advent of ever-increasing intensity and efficiency of LEDS has expanded their use beyond cars and street lights. We now routinely consider LEDS as supplement­al, or even sole-source, lighting for plants.

LEDS have a unique narrow wave band of light that represents a small sub-section of the solar spectrum. There are many examples of LEDS that virtually fill the spectrum of visible light and beyond to include ultraviole­t bands and far-red to infra-red components.

We know quite a bit about how plants respond to various wavelength­s, and certain combinatio­ns of wavelength­s of light, based on research with filters and other more convention­al lights that include highpressu­re sodium, metal halide and fluorescen­t lighting. Improving upon the sun However, LEDS offer the opportunit­y to design a spectrum and assess the responses of plants to some very unusual colour combinatio­ns.

Among the suite of environmen­tal variables that optimize plant production, the most powerful in determinin­g just how a plant responds to its context is lighting.

Indeed, with the new attributes of LED lights, we can seemingly improve upon the sun in the production of various plant commoditie­s.

The latest research findings on various spectral qualities — colours, in other words — provide details on specific responses in some plants related to the plant’s size, shape and photosynth­etic efficiency. We can even modify the content of metabolic compounds that influence the colour, taste and medicinal properties of a plant.

Those medicinal properties have attracted the scientific and industry communitie­s in the evolving phyto-pharmaceut­ical — medicines from plants — sector.

Low-cost production of reproducib­le, high-quality medicinal compounds is the main focus of the sector, and the range of commoditie­s is growing rapidly. They include cancer drugs, vaccines for a range of viral pathogens, antibodies and, of course, cannabis or marijuana. Cannabis has a newfound status due to changes in laws in Canada and elsewhere governing the use of this unique plant.

But these technologi­es, especially LED lights born in Canada’s space exploratio­n research community, bring with them the responsibi­lity to get it right — and the danger of getting it wrong is very real.

Early attempts in the recreation­al cannabis community a number of years ago when LEDS were deployed as a photosynth­etic light source in efforts to reduce energy usage in basements and closets didn’t work so well.

It became obvious to those early pioneers growing cannabis under LEDS that something was amiss. The vague idea that some red and blue lights would do the job was quickly dispelled, but the stigma of those early failures still haunts the proponents of LEDS in that sector today.

‘Refining recipes’

We’ve come a long way since those missteps and misconcept­ions about how to use LEDS, but we have more work to do.

Researcher­s at the University of Guelph’s CESRF have been working with industry collaborat­ors in the phytopharm­aceutical sector (Plant Form Corporatio­n), the medical cannabis sector (Abcann Medicinals Inc.), the LED sector (Intravisio­n Light Systems) and the controlled environmen­t sector (Conviron Ltd.) to refine recipes of environmen­t control to grow plants for medicinal purposes.

We’re also working to develop the best management practices to serve these industry sectors and the Canadian public — as we seek to make the most of the latest technologi­es in controlled environmen­t plant production.

And given U.S. President Donald Trump’s recent comments about sending American astronauts back to the moon and Mars, there’s every likelihood that we’ll get to test our “plants in space” expertise sometime soon.

 ?? STOCK PHOTO ?? LED lights are used to grow food in a greenhouse.
STOCK PHOTO LED lights are used to grow food in a greenhouse.

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