Stabroek News Sunday

In one giant leap for Earth plants, seeds are grown in moon soil

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(Reuters) - Scientists for the first time have grown seeds in soil from the moon - samples retrieved during NASA missions in 1969 and 1972 in an achievemen­t that heralds the promise of using earthly plants to support human outposts on other worlds.

Researcher­s said on Thursday they planted seeds of a diminutive flowering weed called Arabidopsi­s thaliana in 12 small thimble-sized containers each bearing a gram of moon soil, more properly called lunar regolith, and watched as they sprouted and grew. Lunar regolith, with its sharp particles and lack of organic material, differs greatly from Earth soil, so it was unknown whether seeds would germinate.

“When we first saw that abundance of green sprouts cast over all of the samples, it took our breath away,” said horticultu­ral sciences professor Anna-Lisa Paul, director of the University of Florida Interdisci­plinary Center for Biotechnol­ogy Research and coleader of the study published in the journal Communicat­ions Biology.

“Plants can grow in lunar regolith. That one simple statement is huge and opens the door to future exploratio­n using resources in place

on the moon and likely Mars,” Paul said.

Every seed germinated and there were no outward difference­s at the early stages of growth between those sown in the regolith - composed mostly of crushed basalt rocks - and seeds sown for comparativ­e reasons in volcanic ash from Earth with similar mineral compositio­n and particle size.

The regolith seeds, perhaps

unsurprisi­ngly, did less well than the comparison plants.

They were slower to grow and generally littler, had more stunted roots and were more apt to exhibit stress-related traits such as smaller leaves and deep reddish black coloration not typical of healthy growth. They also showed gene activity indicative of stress, similar to plant reactions to salt, metal and oxidation.

 ?? ?? The plant species Arabidopsi­s thaliana is placed in a vial at a University of Florida laboratory for later genetic analysis after growing in a small amount of lunar regolith soil from the moon in this undated handout photo. (Image: Tyler Jones, UF/IFAS/Handout via REUTERS)
The plant species Arabidopsi­s thaliana is placed in a vial at a University of Florida laboratory for later genetic analysis after growing in a small amount of lunar regolith soil from the moon in this undated handout photo. (Image: Tyler Jones, UF/IFAS/Handout via REUTERS)

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