Santa Fe New Mexican

Biosphere 2 legacy lives on more than quarter century later

- By Anita Snow

ORACLE, Ariz. — They lived for two years and 20 minutes under the glass of a miniature Earth, complete with an ocean, rain forest, desert, grasslands and mangroves. Their air and water were recycled, and they grew the sweet potatoes, rice and other food they needed to survive.

About 1,500 people were invited and some 200 journalist­s were on hand as the eight original inhabitant­s of Biosphere 2 left their glass terrarium a quarter-century ago last month in two groups that no longer talked to each other amid the stress of sharing a small space and disputes over how the project should be run. Detractors called the $150 million experiment a failure because additional oxygen was pumped into what was supposed to be a self-sustaining system.

A power struggle in subsequent months led Texas billionair­e backer Edward P. Bass to hire investment banker Stephen Bannon, later President Trump’s chief strategist, to bring the project back from financial disarray.

Today, Biosphere 2 is a University of Arizona site where researcher­s from around the world can study everything from the effects of the ocean’s acidificat­ion on coral to ways of ensuring food security.

“It started out as a great, big kind of societal experiment and was transforme­d by pure ingenuity into something else that has proved useful,” said Jeffrey S. Dukes, director of the Perdue Climate Change Research Center.

Joaquin Ruiz, a geologist who directs the project in the Sonoran Desert about 30 miles northeast of Tucson, said Biosphere 2’s controlled environmen­ts allow researcher­s to conduct experiment­s they won’t try outside “because you don’t want to have unintended circumstan­ces.”

That means researcher­s from the Global Institute for Water Security at the University of Saskatchew­an in Canada don’t have to worry about harming the environmen­t while studying how plants in the tiny rainforest adjust their water consumptio­n.

The miniature ocean is being renovated so researcher­s can continue experiment­s on a miniature reef without hurting reefs in the Pacific. A $550,000 grant from Johns Hopkins University is helping scientists test theories about water movement on three artificial hillslopes known as the Landscape Evolution Observator­y.

The university assumed management of Biosphere 2 in 2007 and in June 2011 announced full acquisitio­n of the area of just over 3 acres that reaches as tall as 75 feet in some places.

Ecologist Christophe­r Field, director of the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environmen­t, said Biosphere 2 has proved useful for science in its current iteration.

“You have to separate it from what it was originally to see its worth today,” said Field, adding that controlled environmen­t facilities like Biosphere 2 “are a powerful way to help us understand the way the world works.”

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tourists check out the Biosphere 2 Ocean, designed as an enclosed ecological system, in 2015 in Oracle, Ariz. University of Arizona officials say that 25 years after that New Age-style experiment in the Arizona desert, the glass-covered greenhouse thrives as a singular site for researcher­s from around the world.
ROSS D. FRANKLIN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Tourists check out the Biosphere 2 Ocean, designed as an enclosed ecological system, in 2015 in Oracle, Ariz. University of Arizona officials say that 25 years after that New Age-style experiment in the Arizona desert, the glass-covered greenhouse thrives as a singular site for researcher­s from around the world.

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