Film “The Martian” was right, experiment suggests potatoes CAN grow on Mars

From the INTERNATIONAL POTATO CENTER / CENTRO INTERNACIONAL DE LA PAPA and the “do you want fires with that interplanetary travel” department comes this interesting finding that I thought worth sharing for the sheer novelty of it. In case you’ve never seen the movie “The Martian“, our intrepid space castaway, played by Matt Damon, is able to survive long enough until a rescue mission can be launched by growing potatoes in Martian soil.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bUHboDNye_8

Indicators show potatoes can grow on Mars

CubeSat-contained environment experiment underway

The International Potato Center (CIP) launched a series of experiments to discover if potatoes can grow under Mars atmospheric conditions and thereby prove they are also able to grow in extreme climates on Earth. This Phase Two effort of CIP’s proof of concept experiment to grow potatoes in simulated Martian conditions began on February 14, 2016 when a tuber was planted in a specially constructed CubeSat contained environment built by engineers from University of Engineering and Technology (UTEC) in Lima based upon designs and advice provided by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in Ames Research Center (NASA ARC), California. Preliminary results are positive.

The Potatoes on Mars project was conceived by CIP to both understand how potatoes might grow in Mars conditions and also see how they survive in the extreme conditions similar to what parts of the world already suffering from climate change and weather shocks are already experiencing.

“Growing crops under Mars-like conditions is an important phase of this experiment,” says Julio Valdivia-Silva, a research associate with the SETI Institute who has worked at NASA’s Ames Research Center (NASA ARC) and now works at UTEC in Lima. “If the crops can tolerate the extreme conditions that we are exposing them to in our CubeSat, they have a good chance to grow on Mars. We will do several rounds of experiments to find out which potato varieties do best. “We want to know what the minimum conditions are that a potato needs to survive,” he said.

The CubeSat houses a container holding soil and the tuber. Inside this hermetically sealed environment the CubeSat delivers nutrient rich water, controls the temperature for Mars day and night conditions and mimics Mars air pressure, oxygen and carbon dioxide levels. Sensors constantly monitor these conditions and live streaming cameras record the soil in anticipation of the potato sprouting. Live streams of the experiment can be viewed at potatoes.space/mars or by going to the CIP website at http://www.CIPotato.org.

According to CIP potato breeder Walter Amoros, one advantage potato great genetic capacity for adaptation to extreme environments. CIP has tapped into that capacity by breeding potato clones that tolerate conditions such as soil salinity and drought, in order to help smallholder farmers grow food in marginal areas that could grow harsher under climate change.

In 2016, CIP brought Mars analog soil from the Pampas de La Joya desert in Southern Peru to its experimental station in La Molina, Lima. There CIP was able to show proof that potatoes could grow in this dry, salty soil with some help from fertilized Earth soil for both nutrition and structure.

“We have been looking at the very dry soils found in the southern Peruvian desert. These are the most Mars-like soils found on Earth.” Chris McKay of NASA ARC. “This [research] could have a direct technological benefit on Earth and a direct biological benefit on Earth,” says Chris McKay of NASA ARC.

From the initial experiment, CIP scientists concluded that future Mars missions that hope to grow potatoes will have to prepare soil with a loose structure and nutrients to allow the tubers to obtain enough air and water to allow it to tuberize.

“It was a pleasant surprise to see that potatoes we’ve bred to tolerate abiotic stress were able to produce tubers in this soil,” Amoros said. He added that one of the best performing varieties was very salt-tolerant from the CIP breeding program for adaptation to subtropical lowlands with tolerance to abiotic stress that was also recently released as a variety in Bangladesh for cultivation in coastal areas with high soil salinity.

Amoros noted that whatever their implications for Mars missions, the experiments have already provided good news about potato’s potential for helping people survive in extreme environments on Earth.

“The results indicate that our efforts to breed varieties with high potential for strengthening food security in areas that are affected, or will be affected by climate change, are working,” he said.

The Potatoes on Mars project has been conducted by CIP with the advice of NASA ARC and construction of the CubeSat technology was done by student engineers and their advisors at UTEC. NASA and UTEC scientist Julio Valdivia-Silva collaborated extensively with teams of UTEC and CIP scientists on both phases of this experiment. He identified the soil from Pampas de La Joya desert and led the effort to construct the sophisticated CubeSat.

###

The International Potato Center, known by its Spanish acronym CIP, was founded in 1971 as a root and tuber research-for-development institution delivering sustainable solutions to the pressing world problems of hunger, poverty, and climate change. CIP is truly a global center, with headquarters in Lima, Peru and offices in 20 developing countries across Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Working closely with our partners, CIP seeks to achieve food security, improved nutrition, and gender equity for poor people in the developing world in the midst of climate change. CIP furthers its mission through rigorous research, innovation in science and technology, and capacity strengthening regarding root and tuber farming and food systems.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

184 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
urederra
March 9, 2017 9:31 am

CIP seeks to achieve food security, improved nutrition, and gender equity for poor people in the developing world in the midst of climate change.

Just like the miss universe contestant has to say that she wishes for “world peace” if she wants to win the contest, these people have to add the mandatory climate change scare to make their research more credible.

And if that is not enough, they added the gender equity bit, They may think that the climate change scare is losing momentum.

BTW, I do not trust them, I do not believe they have grown potatoes in a 6 to 9 torr atmosphere. As pointed out above, those conditions are too close to freeze drying conditions. water will sublimate or evaporate if the temperature is above 10 C or will freeze if the temperature is below -10 C.

Resourceguy
Reply to  urederra
March 9, 2017 10:50 am

+1

Resourceguy
March 9, 2017 10:22 am

Who will plant them on Mars and harvest them? Does a robot on Mars really need them in the first place, or will be a trillion dollar demonstration grant?

fretslider
March 9, 2017 10:26 am

>i>Previous Martian climate models suggested that …

http://www.space.com/33001-mars-ice-age-ending-now.html

misterious
March 9, 2017 11:44 am

There are enormous Barchan sand dunes on Mars. The force generated by Martian winds is still impressive, despide the ridiculous atmospheric pressure claim (the Martian sky should be black at a few milibars atmospheric pressure, except perhaps a few degrees above the horizon). If you fly a baloon in the Earth’s atmosphere where the pressure would a few milibars (at about 35km height), the sky above is surely black. Even the Martian rovers photographed the sand movement, and the covering of their wheel traces from one day to another. That is heavy sand grains, not dust! There are huge areas which are completely covered in fog for significant periods throughout the year (that is water vapor/ water ice), especially in the lower areas like the Hellas Basin. Just ask the amateur astronomers who routinely do Mars imaging. Also ask them what the hell are the atmospheric formations they capturing at altitudes above 200 km up in the Martian sky (because it happened). Also wonder why so much probe landings fail, including the last one where the craft was pretty sure it almost reached the surface while still some km up in the air…

Sara
March 9, 2017 5:29 pm

The soil of Mars is rife with magnetic spots, from this Sky & Telescope article back in 2004. http://www.skyandtelescope.com/astronomy-news/marss-bumpy-magnetism/
It’s ‘lumpy and bumpy’ magnetism. Don’t have that back here on Earth. Also, Mars has an atmosphere that is chemically different from Earth’s. Makes sunsets blue instead of red. They aren’t ‘duplicating’ Mars at all. They’re just pretending they know what they’re doing.

Resourceguy
Reply to  Sara
March 10, 2017 6:17 am

It’s close enough for moviegoers and granting authorities.

Glenn999
March 10, 2017 12:00 pm

Why not just send the spuds on the back of the next rover and wait for them to sprout and grow. Before long they will evolve into a sentient life form and try to get back home.

mountainape5
March 11, 2017 4:14 am

Why send humans though? We can’t live long term there anyway, whats the point?
Less gravity, no oxygen, too cold, unprotected from the sun etc

Machines do a far better job.