The first plants grew in the soil from the Moon – What the experiment showed – Watch video

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American scientists cultivated plants on Earth in the soil from the moon (lunar regolith)something that happens for the first time in human history. This is the first step towards one day cultivating on the Moon plants suitable for food and oxygen, which will support future manned space missions to satellite of our planet. In other words, the way was opened for the first farmers on the moon!

These first experiments were performed with small samples of lunar soil (a total of 12 grams) collected by astronauts from NASA Apollo 11,12 and 17 missions, show that it is possible to grow and grow terrestrial plants in soil that is very different from terrestrial. But they grow more slowly, are usually smaller in size and show more signs of stress than when they grow in soil from the Earth.

The aim of the study was to determine whether it is viable to grow plants in the original soil of the moon and not in some of its simulations. The findings, according to scientists, show that although the lunar ‘soil’ can be used to grow plants, it does not support their growth as well as terrestrial soil of volcanic origin, especially if the former has been exposed for a longer period of time to the surface of the Moon. The researchers estimate that cosmic radiation and the solar ‘wind’ cause damage to the lunar ground, while the presence of small iron particles in it is also a problem.

The University of Florida researchers led by Professors Robert Ferl and Ana-Lisa Paulwho made the relevant publication in the biology journal “Communications Biology”, experimented with Arabidopsis thaliana, which has been widely used in similar experiments, in part because its genome has been “read” in its entirety. The two researchers are internationally recognized experts in the study of plants in space, including having conducted relevant experiments on the International Space Station.

The small flowering plant arabidopsi, which thrives in Eurasia and Africa, was tested on 12 samples of lunar soil collected from different layers of the lunar surface, as well as on 16 samples of volcanic ash from Earth, which had a similar composition and particle size with the lunar soil.

It was found that while the seeds were growing in all conditions, the plants in the lunar soil grew at a slower rate, took longer to shed leaves and their roots were more cachectic. Some also contained reddish-black marks, characteristic of plant stress. In addition, genetic analysis revealed that these plants had expressed more than 1,000 genes related to stress.

Also, the plants that grew in the older soil of the “Apollo 11” mission, grew worse than those that grew in more “fresh” soil brought by the subsequent “Apollo” missions.

However, the main message is optimistic. As Dr. Paul put it, “we wanted to do this experiment because we asked the same question years ago: can plants grow on lunar soil? The answer, yes, is yes.”

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