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Second Plant
Experiment: Dwarf Wheat Cultivar
The plants were planted at two density levels: 356 seeds per m2 and 746 seeds per m2. Light levels were on average 48.4 mol m-2 d-1 Almost three months later, between the 16th and 18th of May, 2003 the east and west-side soil-beds were harvested in planned sequence and the plants cut off at ground level. On the east side the dry seed biomass was 566.5 g m-2 and on the west side the dry seed biomass was 812.3 g m-2. The overall yield was slightly lower (5-10%) compared with KSC Breadboard wheat crops grown with a hydroponic solution, but with comparable light levels which shows the importance of testing space-based cultivars with soil-based systems as a sustainable system. Though the wheat cultivar experiment had reached a successful conclusion, system monitoring and facility testing continued for some time afterwards. The addition of a downward looking digital camera allows system operators to see from a fixed vantage point, events occurring inside the chamber, in real time. Until now observations had relied upon observation of the inside of the chamber either through the viewing windows, or by direct observation at times when a crew-member entered the Chamber to carry out necessary maintenance, weeding etc. The camera is programmed to take a fixed number of images throughout the day, which can then be correlated with other data. Eventually remote image analysis, both quantitative and qualitative, will be carried out using this and later upgrade versions of the system.
To see a progressive record of images taken during the experiment - click here Reference: William F. Dempster, J.P. Allen, A. Alling , M. Nelson, S. Silverstone, M. Van Thillo. 2003. Atmospheric dynamics in the Laboratory Biosphere with wheat and sweet potato crops. Advances in Space Research 2005;35(9):1552-6. View this publication on line:
Abstract © 2005 COSPAR Nelson, M., W.F. Dempster, S.
Silverstone, A. Alling, J.P. Allen and M. Van Thillo. 2005. Crop yield and
light/energy efficiency in a closed ecological system: two laboratory biosphere
experiments. Advances in Space
Research 35 (2005) 1539-1543. Abstract: Two crop growth experiments in the soil-based closed
ecological facility, Laboratory Biosphere, were conducted from 2003 to 2004 with
candidate space life support crops. Apogee wheat (Utah State University variety)
was grown, planted at two densities, 400 and 800 seeds m-2. The lighting regime
for the wheat crop was 16 h of light-8 h dark at a total light intensity of
around 840 micromoles m-2 s-1 and 48.4 mol m-2 d-1 over 84 days. Average biomass
was 1395 g m-2, 16.0 g m-2 d-1 and average seed production was 689 g m-2 and 7.9
g m-2 d-1. The less densely planted side was more productive than the denser
planting, with 1634 g m-2 and 18.8 g m-2 d-1 of biomass vs. 1156 g m-2 and 13.3
g m-2 d-1; and a seed harvest of 812.3 g m-2 and 9.3 g m-2 d-1 vs. 566.5 g m-2
and 6.5 g m-2 d-1. Harvest index was 0.49 for the wheat crop. The experiment
with sweet potato used TU-82-155 a compact variety developed at Tuskegee
University. Light during the sweet potato experiment, on a 18 h on/6 h dark
cycle, totaled 5568 total moles of light per square meter in 126 days for the
sweet potatoes, or an average of 44.2 mol m-2 d-1. Temperature regime was 28 +/-
3 degrees C day/22 +/- 4 degrees C night. Sweet potato tuber yield was 39.7 kg
wet weight, or an average of 7.4 kg m-2, and 7.7 kg dry weight of tubers since
dry weight was about 18.6% wet weight. Average per day production was 58.7 g m-2
d-1 wet weight and 11.3 g m-2 d-1. For the wheat, average light efficiency was
0.34 g biomass per mole, and 0.17 g seed per mole. The best area of wheat had an
efficiency of light utilization of 0.51 g biomass per mole and 0.22 g seed per
mole. For the sweet potato crop, light efficiency per tuber wet weight was 1.33
g mol-1 and 0.34 g dry weight of tuber per mole of light. The best area of tuber
production had 1.77 g mol-1 wet weight and 0.34 g mol-1 of light dry weight. The
Laboratory Biosphere experiment's light efficiency was somewhat higher than the
USU field results but somewhat below greenhouse trials at comparable light
levels, and the best portion of the crop at 0.22 g mol-1 was in-between those
values. Sweet potato production was overall close to 50% higher than trials
using hydroponic methods with TU-82-155 at NASA JSC. Compared to projected
yields for the Mars on Earth life support system, these wheat yields were about
15% higher, and the sweet potato yields averaged over 80% higher.
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