
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
This little plant is a lot tougher than it looks.
Researchers exposed moss spores to the harsh environment of space for nine months recently, and the results were surprising, a new study reports.
"Most living organisms, including humans, cannot survive even briefly in the vacuum of space," study lead author Tomomichi Fujita, of Hokkaido University in Japan, said in a statement. "However, the moss spores retained their vitality after nine months of direct exposure. This provides striking evidence that the life that has evolved on Earth possesses, at the cellular level, intrinsic mechanisms to endure the conditions of space."
Mosses are some of the oldest plants on Earth. They evolved more than 400 million years ago and lack some of the signature traits of more "advanced" flora — for instance, they don't have a vascular system that transports water and nutrients throughout their bodies. But many mosses are quite hardy, thriving in extreme environments around the world from the Arctic tundra to the sands of the Sahara.
Fujita and his team wanted to see if that resilience extends beyond Earth. So, they packed some spores of a widespread species known as "spreading earthmoss" aboard Northrop Grumman's 17th Cygnus cargo spacecraft, which launched to the International Space Station (ISS) in March 2022.
The scientists selected spores — or, more specifically, sporophytes, the reproductive structures that produce spores — after conducting a few experiments here on Earth. Those experiments involved exposing the sporophytes, as well as juvenile moss and moss stem cells, to space-like conditions in the lab — a vacuum environment, microgravity, high levels of ultraviolet (UV) radiation and large temperature swings.
The researchers determined that UV radiation was the single biggest stressor for the moss, and that the sporophytes handled it — and the other hardships — much better than the juvenile moss and moss stem cells did.
So, they sent some sporophytes to the ISS. Astronauts affixed the samples to the station's exterior, where they remained for 283 days before coming back to Earth on a Dragon cargo capsule in January 2023. (Cygnus wasn't designed to survive the trip back to Earth, but Dragon crew and cargo craft are reusable.)
Fujita and his colleagues were in for a surprise when they took a look at the space-flown spores.
"We expected almost zero survival, but the result was the opposite: Most of the spores survived," he said. "We were genuinely astonished by the extraordinary durability of these tiny plant cells."
More than 80% of the sporophytes were still alive, in fact, and 89% of those survivors were able to germinate back in the lab. Spaceflight caused a 20% reduction in chlorophyll a, the main pigment involved in photosynthesis, but the spores seemed to be healthy despite that drop, the team found.
Indeed, the sporophytes likely could have survived much longer in the final frontier — 5,600 days or so, according to a mathematical model the researchers developed.
"This study demonstrates the astonishing resilience of life that originated on Earth," Fujita said. (We've gotten previous peeks at this resilience, which is displayed by a variety of organisms, such as bacteria and tardigrades.)
The new research could also have implications for journeys beyond our home planet, Fujita added.
"Ultimately, we hope this work opens a new frontier toward constructing ecosystems in extraterrestrial environments such as the moon and Mars," he said. "I hope that our moss research will serve as a starting point."
The new study was published Thursday (Nov. 20) in the journal iScience.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Exploiting Unsold Rams: May Be Less expensive Than You Suspect - 2
Venezuelans in Madrid celebrate Maduro's capture - 3
Exposure to neighborhood violence leads some Denver teens to use tobacco and alcohol earlier, new study shows - 4
Why don’t humans have hair all over their bodies? A biologist explains our lack of fur - 5
The next frontier in space is closer than you think – welcome to the world of very low Earth orbit satellites
Coalition led by Iraqi PM al-Sudani wins parliamentary elections
Building an Individual Brand: Illustrations from Powerhouses
Game theory explains why reasonable parents make vaccine choices that fuel outbreaks
Rebecca Gayheart on her 'very complicated' relationship with Eric Dane: 'I am always going to want the best for him'
The Best Internet based Courses for Expertise Improvement
Vote In favor of Your Number one Savvy Beds
Building Tough Connections: Individual Bits of knowledge on Association
More loons are filling Maine's lakes with their ghostlike calls
How on earth did 'Shark Tank' star Kevin O'Leary end up in 'Marty Supreme'? I'll let him explain.













