While scientists are yet to figure out how to protect a crewed mission to Mars from the unsafe levels of radiation the astronauts would be exposed to while in space and on the planet’s surface, one research team has already come up with a scheme that may make growing crops in Martian soil possible.
In their study, published this week in PLOS One, the researchers note that the low nutrient content of soil and high salinity of water on Mars make farming there problematic, to put it mildly.
In order to tackle this problem, the team proposes “simple and efficient strategies for treating basaltic regolith simulant soil and briny water simulant for suitable resources for growing plants.”
Regarding Martian soil, the researchers suggest that alfalfa plants can grow in it, and that the “alfalfa biomass” can be used as fertilizer to grow crops such as turnip, radish, and lettuce.
As for the water on Mars, the team notes that marine cyanobacterium Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 “effectively desalinates” the briny water that simulates the water found on Mars, with the researchers adding that “filtration through basalt-type volcanic rocks” can further enhance the desalination process.
“Our findings indicate that it is possible to grow food crops with alfalfa treated basaltic regolith martian soil as a substratum watered with biodesalinated water,” the researchers postulate in the abstract of their work.