Slashdot Mirror


Green Plants for Mars Mission

An anonymous reader writes "NASA doesn't keep back that they are going to send a human expedition to Mars in a couple of decades. One of the obstacles for the longstanding 35-million-mile voyage is a food production. NASA researchers have focused on 20 plant species that NASA believes could be grown during a flight to Mars and after landing on the fourth planet from the Sun. By far not all of them are suitable for space expedition."

6 of 262 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Where's the device that speeds and slows the by chris+mazuc · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, smoking in such a limited atmosphere might overload the air handlers. Brownies would probably be a much better idea.

    --
    E pluribus unum
  2. Re:summary=story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    parent is insightful. the linked article provides little information. all that i could find is an article mentioning radishes, green onions, and lettuce as possible candidate species.

    A-Day

  3. the list by r00t · · Score: 5, Informative

    zucchini
    garlic
    kudzu
    black beans
    trumpet vine
    sweet potato
    bamboo
    red beans
    spider plant
    black-eye beans
    redwood
    dill
    onion
    mustard
    catnip
    fava beans
    stinging nettle
    cabbage
    thistle
    dandilion

    1. Re:the list by gobbo · · Score: 4, Informative
      If that list is bona fide, I'm surprised soy beans aren't on it.

      I'm not. Fava is also a short bushing bean--so it fits the same stacking profile for access to light--and just as versatile with less processing required. Soy is good for large harvesting machines, which has something to do with its ubiquity--it's tied to a large industrial system. Simply boiled fava beans taste better than soy prepared the same way. They have similar nutritious characteristics. Less processing=better nutrition, better energy consumption. Give me a fava plant in the garden over soy any day.

  4. Re:Closed System test run by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Informative

    Biosphere 2 was a technical failure. THey had to pump extra oxygen into the system after it was discovered that the extinction rate within the dome was a lot higher than expected. Something like 70% of all species put into the system to begin with died out within the life of the experiment.

  5. Re:Plants on Mars itself? by heli0 · · Score: 3, Informative
    http://archives.cnn.com/2001/TECH/space/06/04/mars .jellyplants/

    Terrestrial scientists planning to sprout genetically altered weeds on Mars hope to take part in a $300 million mission to the red planet that could pave the way for human colonization.

    "It will be a symbolic step of life from Earth, leaving Earth, and growing somewhere else," said Chris McKay, a NASA scientist involved in Mars missions.

    "I have no doubt that we can get plants to survive on Mars," said Rob Ferl, a University of Florida scientist who is trying to reserve a spot for the experiment on the proposed 2007 mission.

    A common weed along roadsides and trails, the Arabidopsis plant was selected for the project because of its short life cycle, about 5 weeks, its diminutive size, about 7 inches, and because its entire genetic structure has been mapped and sequenced.

    If the lowly weed succeeds in its lofty task, the researchers hope it sparks more scientific interest in the possibility of "terraforming" Mars, or engineering its ecosystems to make them more suitable for Earth life.

    Such tinkering would likely be required to produce oxygen, food and water for human transplants, as the cost of sending such essentials from Earth would be prohibitive.

    "I have no doubt what we can get plants to survive on Mars. When we do, we will have shown that Earth-evolved life is capable of thriving in distant worlds, and we will have set the stage for human colonization," Ferl said.
    --
    Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...