Science & Technology - Posted by Robert Wells-Florida on Monday, December 17, 2012 14:27 - 4 Comments    
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Plants in space: No gravity required

The movements plant roots make to get around rocks and other obstacles "has always been thought to be dependent on gravity," says Anna-Lisa Paul, "but as the images from our experiment started to come down from the International Space Station in early 2010, it was clear that gravity was not required after all." (Credit: Pere Tubert Juhé/Flickr)

U. FLORIDA (US) — Seeds in space sprout pretty much the same way they do here on Earth, even without gravity, new research shows.


In a study published in the current issue of the journal BMC Plant Biology, researchers report for the first time that without gravity, roots display normal movements used to get around rocks and other obstacles.

The movements, known as waving and skewing, were thought to be due to gravity pulling on roots as they sample their growing surface with touch, says Anna-Lisa Paul, a horticultural sciences research associate professor at the University of Florida and one of the study’s lead authors.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1186/1471-2229-12-232

“The skewing and waving of roots has always been thought to dependent on gravity, but as the images from our experiment started to come down from the International Space Station in early 2010, it was clear that gravity was not required after all. Roots in space make these same kinds of movements and choices that you see on the ground.”

The findings are important, says Rob Ferl, horticultural sciences professor and the study’s other lead author, because they provide fundamental insight into how roots interact with their environment and suggest that plants could likely be cultivated in reduced-gravity environments, such as space stations or the moon.

“As space agriculturalists, we really want to know that when we move to the moon, when we move to Mars, which don’t have the same amount of gravity that we have, can we still grow plants? Will their roots still work right in a fractional gravity environment?” Ferl says. “And the answer is yes, definitely.”

For the study, the researchers grew Wassilweskija and Columbia varieties of Arabidopsis thaliana, plants related to mustard that scientists often use as model plants for research, on both the Space Station in zero gravity and on Earth.

The plants were grown in a nutrient-rich agar solution in specialized chambers developed by Kennedy Space Center engineers that allowed a high-resolution camera to photograph plant growth every six hours. For the plants in space and on Earth, images were transmitted to the researchers for real-time analysis.

The chamber housing the plants on the ground was set to provide the same temperature and environmental conditions experienced by the plants in orbit. Although differences in root growth were recorded between the plants on Earth and the plants in space, overall, root growth behaviors were generally similar.

Both varieties demonstrated growth away from the seed and typical patterns of skewing, which means to grow at a slant away from a purely vertical direction, and waving, which means to grow in tight, alternating curves. For example, Wassilweskija roots skewed strongly to the right in space while Columbia roots slightly skewed to the left, just as they do on Earth.

In the absence of gravity, perhaps the plant is responding to another directional cue, such as the overhead light source, Paul says.

“The space flight environment is absolutely outside the evolutionary experience of any organism on the face of the planet. It was very intriguing for to us to realize there is an evolutionary adaptation for roots to grow away from the seed to find the nutrients and water the plant needs to survive in the absence of gravity.”

The experiments were launched in 2010 and returned on space shuttle Endeavour on June 1, 2011. NASA funded the research. Claire E. Amalfitano, who was a biological scientist in Ferl’s lab, is also an author of the study.

Source: University of Florida

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UWMadison
Dec 17, 2012 17:40

Plants grow upside down — How is this in ANY WAY impressive, or even a smart scientific discovery? Wow… what a waste of money and room on the ISS. There are much easier ways to test this on planet earth, with the same general principles.

Chris
Dec 17, 2012 19:32

Anything that deepens our understanding of how things work in nature is never a waste of time. It was originally thought that gravity played a role in how plant roots grow. This experiment suggests otherwise. It isn’t flashy or earth shattering, but it is a stepping stone on the way to discovering how terrestrial life adapts to living in space.

Peter M. Hadden
Dec 18, 2012 13:16

I have not ready the study but one could argue that gravity is always present – even in very small quantities at the ISS space station. This minuscule “amount” of gravity might cause the roots to point towards the earth.

A. Feit
Dec 19, 2012 12:33

What I’d like to see for the next experiment is a variety of edible plants grown. Then the astronauts can have a salad at the end of the experiment.

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