Pick-and-Eat Salad-Crop Productivity, Nutritional Value, and Acceptability to Supplement the ISS Food SystemThe capability to grow nutritious, palatable food for crew consumption during spaceflight has the potential to provide health-promoting, bioavailable nutrients, enhance the dietary experience, and reduce launch mass as we move toward longer-duration missions. However, studies of edible produce during spaceflight have been limited, leaving a significant knowledge gap in the methods required to grow safe, acceptable, nutritious crops for consumption in space. Researchers from Kennedy Space Center, Johnson Space Center, Purdue University and ORBITEC have teamed up to explore the potential for plant growth and food production on the International Space Station (ISS) and future exploration missions. KSC, Purdue, and ORBITEC bring a history of plant and plant-microbial interaction research for ISS and for future bioregenerative life support systems. JSC brings expertise in Advanced Food Technology (AFT), Behavioral Health and Performance (BHP), and statistics. The Veggie vegetable-production system on the ISS offers an opportunity to develop a pick-and-eat fresh vegetable component to the ISS food system as a first step to bioregenerative supplemental food production. We propose growing salad plants in the Veggie unit during spaceflight, focusing on the impact of light quality and fertilizer formulation on crop morphology, edible biomass yield, microbial food safety, organoleptic acceptability, nutritional value, and behavioral health benefits of the fresh produce. The first phase of the project will involve flight tests using leafy greens, with a small Chinese cabbage variety, Tokyo bekana, previously down selected through a series of research tests as a suitable candidate. The second phase will focus on dwarf tomato. Down selection of candidate varieties have been performed, and the dwarf cultivar Red Robin has been selected as the test crop. Four light treatments and three fertilizer treatments will be tested for each crop on the ground, to down select to two light treatments and one fertilizer treatment to test on ISS. Our work will help define light colors, levels, and horticultural best practices to achieve high yields of safe, nutritious leafy greens and tomatoes to supplement a space diet of prepackaged food. Our final deliverable will be the development of growth protocols for these crops in a spaceflight vegetable production system. With this work, and potentially with other pending joint projects, we will continue the synergistic research to help close gaps in the human research roadmap, and enable humans to venture to Mars and beyond. This research was co-funded by the Human Research Program and Space Biology (MTL1075) in the ILSRA 2015 NRA call.
Document ID
20160001701
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Massa, G. D. (NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL United States)
Wheeler, R. M. (NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL United States)
Hummerick, M. E. (Vencore Services and Solutions, Inc. Kennedy Space Center, FL, United States)
Morrow, R. C. (Orbitec Technologies Corp. Madison, WI, United States)
Mitchell, C. A. (Purdue Univ. West Lafayette, IN, United States)
Whitmire, A. M. (Wyle Life Sciences, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Ploutz-Snyder, R. J. (Universities Space Research Association Houston, TX, United States)
Douglas, G. L. (NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
February 9, 2016
Publication Date
February 8, 2016
Subject Category
Man/System Technology And Life Support
Report/Patent Number
KSC-E-DAA-TN29069Report Number: KSC-E-DAA-TN29069
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2016 Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop