HIGH TECH TUESDAY:
GREEN MARS
edited by
B. Virtual
Although Mars may once have been warm and wet,
the Red Planet today is a frozen wasteland. Most scientists agree,
it's highly unlikely that any living creature --even a microbe--
could survive for long on the surface of Mars.
When the first humans travel there to explore the Red Planet
up close, they will have to grow their food in airtight, heated
greenhouses. The Martian atmosphere is far too cold and dry for
edible plants to grow in the open air. But if humans ever hope
to establish long-term colonies on their planetary neighbor,
they will no doubt want to find a way to farm outdoors. Imre Friedmann has an idea of how they might take the first step.
Friedmann is a microbiologist who recently joined the
NASA Astrobiology Institute
team at NASA's Ames Research Center. Friedmann was one of the
invited speakers at a NASA-sponsored conference, "The
Physics and Biology of Making Mars Habitable," held
at Ames in October 2000. His talk focused on an organism that
could be used to begin the process of converting the Martian
surface into arable soil.
Mars is covered by a layer of ground-up rock and fine dust,
known as regolith. To convert regolith into soil, it will be
necessary to add organic matter, much as organic farmers on Earth
fertilize their soil by adding compost to it.
On Earth, compost is made up primarily of decayed vegetable
matter. Microorganisms play an important role in breaking down
dead plants, recycling their nutrients back into the soil so
that living plants can reuse them. But on Mars, says Friedmann,
where there is no vegetation to decay, the dead bodies of the
microorganisms themselves will provide the organic matter needed
to build up the soil.

The
trick is finding
the right microbe.
"Among the organisms that are known today," says
Friedmann, "Chroococcidiopsis is most suitable"
for the task.
Chroococcidiopsis is one of the most primitive cyanobacteria
known. What makes it such a good candidate is its ability to
survive in a wide range of extreme
environments that are hostile to most other forms of life.
Chroococcidiopsis has been found growing in hot springs,
in hypersaline (high-salt) habitats, in a number of hot, arid
deserts throughout the world, and in the frigid Ross Desert in
Antarctica.
"Chroococcidiopsis is the constantly appearing
organism in nearly all extreme environments," Friedmann
points out, "at least extreme dry, extreme cold, and extremely
salty environments. This is the one which always comes up."
Moreover, where Chroococcidiopsis survives, it is often
the only living thing that does. But it gladly gives up its dominance
when conditions enable other, more complex forms of life to thrive.
For
clues on how to farm Chroococcidiopsis on Mars, Friedmann
looks to its growth habits in arid regions on Earth. In desert
environments, Chroococcidiopsis grows either inside porous
rocks, or just underground, on the lower surfaces of translucent
pebbles.
In many desert environments,
Chroococcidiopsis grows on the undersides of transparent
rocks, just below the surface.
The pebbles provide an ideal microenvironment for Chroococcidiopsis
in two ways. First, they trap moisture underneath them. Experiments
have shown that small amounts of moisture can cling to the undersurfaces
of rocks for weeks after their above-ground surfaces have dried
out. Second, because the pebbles are translucent, they allow
just enough light to reach the organisms to sustain growth.
Friedmann envisions large farms where the bacteria are cultured
on the underside of strips of glass that are treated to achieve
the proper light-transmission characteristics. Mars today, however,
is too cold for this technique to work effectively. Before even
as hardy a microbe as Chroococcidiopsis could be farmed
on Mars, the planet would have to be warmed up considerably,
to just below the freezing point.

Friedmann,
pictured left, admits that his ideas about growing Chroococcidiopsis
are, at this point, merely a thought experiment.
"I don't think any of us alive today will see this happen,"
he muses. When the time does come to make Mars a more habitable
place, "the technology will be so different that everything
we plan today... will be ridiculously outdated."
Friedmann fully expects that genetic engineering will eventually
develop designer organisms to do the job. Even if Chroococcidiopsis
is ultimately used as the basis, it will be a vastly improved
version of today's microbe.
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