Ad for Idea Lobby blogger Emily Badger
Sunday, February 12, 2012   |  Miller-McCune Homepage

close this window


We encourage you to share any articles or material you find on Miller-McCune.com with friends and colleagues. Please fill in the fields below with the name and e-mail address. Then fill in the same information for you. Miller-McCune will not keep any information about you or your friend, and the e-mail your friends receive will appear to have come from your e-mail address. The asterisk (*) denotes a required field.


From:





To:







Today in Mice

July 20, 2009

Colonizing Space, 40 Rats at a Time

In preparation for colonizing space, a crack crew of middle-aged rats is colonizing a patch of Barcelona.


| PRINT | SHARE

Early next spring, an all-female “crew” of middle-aged Wistar rats will find themselves beginning one long Barcelona holiday.

But instead of trolling the Ramblas for tapas scraps, these unwitting rodents may help ensure their human brethren have the chance to pack up and move off world.

In June, the European Space Agency, along with outside European and Canadian research partners, announced the inauguration of an ecological pilot plant that will test closed-loop ecological technologies for eventual use in lunar habitats and colonies on Mars.

Managed by ESA at Spain’s University Autonoma of Barcelona, the Micro-Ecological Life Support System Alternative, or MELiSSA, is based on an “aquatic” ecosystem.

But MELiSSA’s five interconnected compartments will span only some 200 square meters. So, don’t compare MELISSA with cavernous eco-projects like Biosphere 2.

“We cannot expect the system to stabilize itself,” said ESA bioengineer Christophe Lasseur, MELISSA’s project coordinator. “We need waste processing, oxygen production, urine transformation and carbon dioxide trapping. MELISSA will engineer the loop to create an ecosystem.”

The idea is that over a two-year period, no more or less than 40 rats at any given time will live off the system’s recovered food, oxygen and water. In the process, they are expected to consume about one kilo of oxygen per day, roughly equivalent to an astronaut’s daily intake.

Using photosynthesis and bacteria, MELISSA should recover food, oxygen and water from human waste, carbon dioxide, minerals, algae and higher plants — including wheat, tomatoes, potatoes, soybeans, rice, spinach, onions and lettuce.

Life scientist Daniel Barta at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston says that a MELISSA-style bio-regenerative type follow-on project on the lunar surface would facilitate the natural elimination of waste without having to input a lot of energy. Barta, who is not affiliated with the MELISSA effort, notes the technology would also have application on Mars.

On Mars, Barta says, astronauts would be there long enough without resupply that such regenerative systems would be absolutely essential. There, he says, the aim would be to implement a non-polluting ecology that would ensure that the red planet remains pristine for science.

But no matter how efficient, an engineered closed-loop environment is hardly anyone’s idea of their own private Idaho. Thus, even the rats will certainly be eager to let human “guinea pigs” fulfill the next phase of this long-range undertaking.

That isn’t likely until 2018. Actual testing on the moon, Lasseur says, won’t happen until sometime after 2025.

Sign up for our free e-newsletter.

Are you on Facebook? Become our fan.

Follow us on Twitter.

Add our news to your site.

 

word on the street

Post your comment here

more in this section

also by this author

Bruce Dorminey

Bruce Dorminey is an award-winning U.S.-based science journalist and author of Distant Wanderers: The Search for Planets beyond the Solar System. A fo...

Prop Planes: The Future of Eco-Friendly Aviation?

Propellers’ role in flight date back to the dawn of engine-driven aviation. But the next generation of propeller-driven aircraft engines will put their rotors back in the spotlight.

New Dirt on Climate Change

Researchers have drilled into the middle of America in hopes of understanding past eras when the Earth burped out huge amounts of greenhouse gases.

Long Slog for the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker

Efforts to create a suitable habitat for a striking bird that may or may not be extinct continue a half decade after its reported but uncorroborated resurrection.

Crazy Weather and Climate: Do Dots Connect?

In an interview with Miller-McCune.com, meteorologist Kevin Trenberth examines the world’s recently wacky weather and whether it’s a sign of climate change or just routine variability.

Financial Expert: Global Free Trade Necessary

Financial theorist and trade historian William J. Bernstein portrays globalization as inevitable and ultimately more benign than malign.

Receive 1 year (6 issues) of our print magazine for just $14.95. Miller-McCune features polished, in-depth reports on research and solutions across the policy spectrum — from health care, education and energy to international affairs, poverty and the global economy. It's a must read for well-informed and solutions-driven individuals.

Loading

follow us on:

join our newsletter:

from the source

Gender Wage Gap Skewed By Survey Flaws

The wage gap between the sexes in America has been closing much faster than anyone realized, but that’s tempered by learning it’s been much wider than measurements had shown.

‘Orcas as Slaves’ Argument Sinks

An effort to identify five performing orcas as slaves failed in part, argues one scholar, because there’s no legal precedent establishing them as persons.

The Perceived Delicacy of the Female Conductor

New research finds listeners judge symphonic music differently when they’re told the conductor is a woman.

House Puts Transportation in Partisan Crossfire

Transportation used to be one of the few guaranteed areas of agreement when ideology trumped pragmatism in D.C. But that’s no longer the case.

Pressure to Conform Can Inspire Creativity

New research suggests less-creative people do more innovative thinking when they are told individualism is the norm, and instructed to conform.