Vegetables Grown on Mars-Like Soil Found Safe for
Humans
Four vegetables grown on soil similar to that on Mars have been
found safe for human consumption, Dutch scientists say.
In greenhouses at Wageningen University in the Netherlands,
scientists have worked on growing crops on Mars and Moon soil simulants since
2013.
The first experiment demonstrated that crops could grow on the
soil simulants. Last year, the researchers mixed inedible parts of the 2013 plants
into the simulant and succeeded to grow ten different crops, of which several
were harvested.
One remaining uncertainty was that heavy metals such as cadmium,
copper and lead, which are present in the soils, could contaminate the crops.
If too high levels of heavy metals from the soil are absorbed in
the edible parts of the plants, the crops become poisonous.
The researchers have now tested four of the ten grown crops for
heavy metals: radishes, peas, rye, and tomatoes. No dangerous levels of
aluminium, copper, iron, manganese, zinc, arsenic, cadmium, chrome, nickel and
lead were found, meaning the four crops are safe to eat.
"These remarkable results are very promising," said
senior ecologist Wieger Wamelink.
"We can actually eat the radishes, peas, rye, and tomatoes
and I am very curious what they will taste like," Wamelink said.
For some of the heavy metals the concentrations in the plants
were even lower than in the crops grown in potting soil.
"It's important to test as many crops as possible, to make
sure that settlers on Mars have access to a broad variety of different food
sources," he said.
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