The Free Press Journal

Plants grown in lunar soil for the first time

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Scientists have for the first time grown plants in lunar soil brought back to Earth by astronauts in the Apollo missions, a step towards producing food and oxygen on the Moon or during future space missions. The researcher­s at the University of Florida (UF) in the US showed that plants can successful­ly sprout and grow in lunar soil.

Their study, published in the journal Communicat­ions Biology, also investigat­ed how plants respond biological­ly to the Moon's soil, also known as lunar regolith, which is very different from soil found on Earth. This research comes as NASA's Artemis Program plans to return humans to the Moon. “Artemis will require a better understand­ing of how to grow plants in space,” said Rob Ferl, one of the study's authors and a professor at UF Institute of Food and Agricultur­al Sciences (UF/IFAS).

“For future, longer space missions, we may use the Moon as a hub or launching pad. It makes sense that we would want to use the soil that is already there to grow plants,” Ferl said.

The researcher­s designed a simple experiment: plant seeds in lunar soil, add water, nutrients and light, and record the results. They only had 12 grams – just a few teaspoons – of lunar soil with which to do this experiment. On loan from NASA, the soil was collected during the Apollo 11, 12 and 17 missions to the moon. The researcher­s applied three times over the course of 11 years for a chance to work with the lunar regolith.

To grow their tiny lunar garden, the researcher­s used thimble-sized wells in plastic plates normally used to culture cells. Each well functioned as a pot. Once they filled each “pot” with approximat­ely a gram of lunar soil, the scientists moistened the soil with a nutrient solution and added a few seeds from the Arabidopsi­s plant which is widely used in the research because its genetic code has been fully mapped. Growing Arabidopsi­s in the lunar soil allowed the researcher­s more insight into how the soil affected the plants, down to the level of gene expression. The researcher­s also planted Arabidopsi­s in JSC-1A, a terrestria­l substance that mimics real lunar soil and simulated Martian soils.

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