Mold Attacks Space Station Plants

vostok

Well-Known Member

The zinnias on the International Space Station in December before the mold issue arose.The pillows in Veggie are labelled as such: Pillow A (top left), Pillow B (top right), Pillow C (middle left), Pillow D (middle right), Pillow E (bottom left) and Pillow F (bottom right).

Four zinnia plants on the International Space Station are sickly or dead after mold was discovered in the Veggie experiment facility late December, according to NASA. The problem was immediately traced back to excessive water in the experiment, which was addressed. There are still three healthy plants that appear unaffected by the issue.

ISS commander and NASA astronaut Scott Kelly reported the mold to Mission Control Dec. 22 just as Veggie project manager Trent Smith was trying to manage the water problem. In pictures, Smith saw water on the plants a few days before. He told Discovery News he was trying to relay a command from NASA’s station operations team to increase fan speed in Veggie, but the mold developed before the command could be put through

One solution was, on Christmas Eve, to designate Kelly “commander” of Veggie. Kelly now has more autonomy to make changes to Veggie’s conditions if he feels the plants need it.

Kelly is in the middle of a one-year mission on the station and was there when the first crops from Veggie, romaine lettuce, were harvested in August. “There’s nobody better positioned than Scott,” Smith told Discovery News, saying this decision should cut down on future time delays.

Besides turning up the fan, sanitizing the experiment and wiping the excess water out of Veggie, Kelly bagged the moldy samples and put them in a freezer on station. They will be returned to Earth on the SpaceX 8 Dragon spacecraft later this year, when NASA will perform analysis to see what kind of mold it was. Any plants that die before SpaceX 8 departs will also be returned on that flight.

Each “pillow” of soil in Veggie was initially planted with two seeds, with the healthier of each pair culled early in their lifespans. A second plant -- which Smith dubbed the “stealth plant” -- sprang a little late in Pillow A (see caption in picture above), and investigators decided to leave it. Zinnias are expected to live about 60 days, but can last as long as 80, he added.

The problem was discovered about halfway through the plants’ lifespan. One plant in Pillow A died, while the “stealth plant” in that pillow survived and is growing well. The plants in Pillow B and D also died quickly, and the plant in Pillow E appears deathly ill as of Jan. 4, which was Day 49 of their cycle. The zinnias in Pillows C and F, however, still appear healthy. Smith said ground investigators continue to monitor the situation through photos and talking with Kelly.


NASA astronauts Kjell Lindgren (left) and Scott Kelly sample lettuce grown earlier with the Veg-01 experiment.
Smith added that learning is part of the goal with Veggie. “It’s part of this grand experiment to find out what the plants are telling us, what can we learn from them, what can we change operationally, and what can we tell the crew to look out for when they start gardening on their own.” The aim is to have crews managing their own crops for future long-term space expeditions, such as to Mars.

Veggie, more officially called Veg-01, has been running since March 2014. The facility has seen two lettuce crops harvested. The first set of lettuce was sent back to Earth to make sure it was safe to eat. Astronauts ate the second crop of lettuce after treating them with a sanitizing agent, just as a precaution.

The zinnias are not meant to be eaten, but are good precursor plants for dwarf tomatoes, which will be grown during Veg-05 in 2018. Before then, the crews will grow romaine lettuce and tokyo bekana (Chinese cabbage). The crews will also experiment with using lighting to adjust mineral and vitamin content in the cabbage

http://news.discovery.com/space/space-fungus-mold-found-on-space-station-plants-160107.htm?utm_source=facebook.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=DiscoveryChannel&sf18477997=1
 

heckler73

Well-Known Member
I did hear that mold generally is a persistent issue with humans in space ...lol

I'm sure there would be a few volunteers here at RIU that could help them out ???....lol
Those zinnias would be getting replaced with something quite different, I imagine. I wonder if aeroponics would work well? DWC wouldn't work, but misters? Those would still function.
 

vostok

Well-Known Member
Those zinnias would be getting replaced with something quite different, I imagine. I wonder if aeroponics would work well? DWC wouldn't work, but misters? Those would still function.
I think the plants are so fucked up without gravity,

I feel sorry for them, plants need gravity,

just so they know which way is up, even feeding is a full on riot ..lol
 

ZaraBeth420

Well-Known Member
NASA is kinda stupid for taking strains in space that are not resistant to mold. Every pothead on earth knows that. No wonder we can't go to Mars yet. Our #1 space agency can't even grow non-moldy plants.
 

heckler73

Well-Known Member
I think the plants are so fucked up without gravity,

I feel sorry for them, plants need gravity,

just so they know which way is up, even feeding is a full on riot ..lol
Is it possible the researcher in charge of the zinnias didn't know what they were doing?
Think about it, this is supposed to be in preparation for growing tomatoes.
I don't believe gravity was the problem here. :mrgreen:
 

vostok

Well-Known Member


Everything about a plant needs gravity, even them hormones need to know which way is up

roots need to be anchored in the medium

the only plant I'm aware of that may have a good time gravity free

is the average orchid, that scavengers most its nutes from the air or its host
 
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