Friday, November 8, 2024
Friday, November 8, 2024

Plants thrive in lunar soil with help from phosphorus-making bacteria

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John Furner
John Furnerhttps://dailyobserver.uk
Experienced multimedia journalist with a background in investigative reporting. Expert in interviewing, reporting, fact-checking, and working on a deadline. Excel at cinematic storytelling and sourcing images, sound bites, and video for multimedia publication. Work well with photographers and videographers when not shooting his own stories, and love to collaborate on large, in-depth features.

The Daily Observer London Desk: Reporter- John Furner

Tobacco seedlings growing in simulated lunar soil

Growing plants on the moon could be made easier by adding bacteria to the soil to produce phosphorus, an essential element for plant growth that isn’t readily available in lunar soil.

Lunar regolith, the powdery dust that sits on the moon’s surface, isn’t a good environment for plants to grow in. Researchers have previously grown thale cress, a small flowering plant, in real lunar regolith collected from the Apollo missions, but these turned out small and stunted, mainly because of the lack of nutrients that plants need for growth.

Now, Zhencai Sun at China Agricultural University in Beijing and his colleagues have found that three strains of phosphorus-producing bacteria can improve the nutrient profile of simulated lunar soil by converting calcium phosphate, which plants can’t easily use, into bioavailable phosphorus.

Sun and his team added the three bacteria, Bacillus mucilaginosus, Bacillus megaterium and Pseudomonas fluorescens, to the soil and found that all three species increased phosphorus levels by more than 200 per cent after three weeks.

Tobacco plants (Nicotiana benthamiana) had longer stems and roots after growing for six days in soil containing these bacteria than did plants that were grown in soil without the bacteria. The plants grown in soil with the bacteria also grew four times heavier than their counterparts. Levels of chlorophyll, the pigment that plants use to convert light to chemical energy for growth, were more than 100 per cent higher in the three bacteria-laden samples after 24 days.

It is a useful demonstration, but phosphorus isn’t the only thing that plants need to grow properly, says Karl Hasenstein at the University of Louisiana. “The balance needs to be struck between enhancing the essential elements, not just phosphorus,” he says. Other qualities of the soil, such as acidity levels, are also important and weren’t monitored in the study, he says.

A more fruitful approach could be combining different microbial species together to create a good nutrient profile, similar to soil on Earth, which can contain thousands of different bacterial species producing the nutrients needed for growth, says Hasenstein.

John Furner
John Furnerhttps://dailyobserver.uk
Experienced multimedia journalist with a background in investigative reporting. Expert in interviewing, reporting, fact-checking, and working on a deadline. Excel at cinematic storytelling and sourcing images, sound bites, and video for multimedia publication. Work well with photographers and videographers when not shooting his own stories, and love to collaborate on large, in-depth features.

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John Furner
John Furnerhttps://dailyobserver.uk
Experienced multimedia journalist with a background in investigative reporting. Expert in interviewing, reporting, fact-checking, and working on a deadline. Excel at cinematic storytelling and sourcing images, sound bites, and video for multimedia publication. Work well with photographers and videographers when not shooting his own stories, and love to collaborate on large, in-depth features.