Bees for Development Journal Edition 57 - December 2000

Page 5

A manned mission to Mars (including landing) will take about two years. A one way

trip will take about eight months, but depends heavily on the trajectory flown. The length of stay on Mars might last one to three months. by Anton G Branz, Germany The crew would consist of two or three members and would need among other things food, oxygen, and water. The freshness of food decreases over time. To eat canned food for this length of time

would be unappetising and can cause physical as well as mental health problems. The weight of such a large amount of food plus its containers would be huge

and oxygen requirements need to be considered.

The required water quantity is somewhat less because of its potential to be recycled, and biological waste can be entrusted to the infinite deepness of space

as a hidden message from Earth!

RIQLOGICAL CYCLES duction of the masses needed above can be reduced by the use of three biological cycles which

have food plants as a central point and we can make use of the symbiosis of plants and humans.

The first loop is the oxygen-carbon dioxide loop. Humans breathe in oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide. Plants take in carbon dioxide and release oxygen. A sufficiently large quantity of plants can be used as oxygen generators, which reduces the required amount of oxygen and related containers considerably.

The second loop is the fruit-compost loop. Humans eat the fruits of plants and leave digested “compost” as fertiliser for the plants, that convert compost to appetising titbits: cabbage, carrot, chard, dry bean, onion, peanut, radish, rice, soya bean, spinach, sweet and white potato, tomato or wheat. And everything is quite fresh. A sufficiently large quantity of plants can be used not only for oxygen production but also

as food producers, which would reduce the quantity of food to be transported.

The third loop is the water loop. Used water can eaned and used for watering plants. Plant soil Jo the cleaning to a certain extent as happens here on Earth, and it becomes drinking water. Part of the water is taken from the plant’s roots and .

released via the leaves (as oxygen is released). This water can be condensed (and after mineral

enrichment of course) used as drinking water.

But why does a beekeeper take a remote interest In a trip to Mars?

POLLINATION

ON MARS"

the use of fans when they are grown in a closed space like a glasshouse. Some plants need other

of bees was researched during the NASA

means to be pollinated such as insects, hummingbirds or humans. Pollination by humans can be done by using a small brush from bloom

For this purpose"two identical, made: bee one for the actual shuttle flight and one as a reference

to bloom {see B&D

54, page 6) or by applying

vibrations which makes the pollen float and find its way to another bloom.

Nowadays it can be even more modern. Bumblebees can be bought in a cardboard box and put into a greenhouse to do their job. Bumblebees are more cost-effective and reliable than human pollinators. Potlination does not necessarily have a binary result je pollinated or not. There can also be an intermediate result: poorly pollinated by too little pollen. A prerequisite for proper fruit production is proper pollination. Insects do this quite well in nature.

During a long time and distance of space flight one might use astronauts with a little brush in their hand

as pollinators of their own food to avoid dangerous boredom. Pollination by bees in a closed house with transparent walls and ceiling is apparently not possible. An experiment of this kind was done by the

American Biosphere II test installation. In a bee flight room with non-transparent walls and artificial illumination, bees can do their job very well.

FIRST STEPS TOWARDS THE MARS MISSION Survival in a closed bee flight room Successful experiments on the survival of bees isolated from nature in an enclosed bee flight room over a long time were carried out P van Praagh at the Niedersachsischen by

DrJ

Landesinstitut fiir Bienenkunde in Germany. Bees were fed with sugar solution, plain water and fine ground pollen outside the hive. The harvest was done by the bees directly. A high air humidity caused a high brood rate. Warming impulse was low. The experiment duration was 18 months.

At the Research Centre for Insect Pollination and

References EIJNDE van der,] (1990) Ganzjahrige Ziichtung von Hummelvélkem fiir die Bestaubung in Gewachshausern: eine rasche Entwicklung. ADIZ 6: pp 12-14. PRAAGH van,] P (1975) Light-ripple and visual acuity in a climate room for honeybees (Apis mellifera L). Netherlands Journal of Zoology 25(4): pp 506-515. PRAAGH van,J P; BRINKSCHMIDT,B (1987) Pollen collecting behaviour of Apis mellifera in a bee flight room. In: Eder/Rembold,

STS-13in

April

Space... 1984.saya

fis:

model on the ground.

These ‘bee-tight’ hives had an aluminium case and a transparent cover. Three wooden frames were contained, one with drawn-out comb, and two with comb foundation of the same size but without imprinted foundation ie with a smooth surface.

At one side of the hive were the three frames, on the other side a feeder with sugar syrup.

The space between served as flight room. Additionally there were two ventilation holes, a fan and two thermometers.

addition to the queen there were 3400 worker bees. About 200 cm’ comb were built during this In

space flight and part of the sugar syrup was used.

The queen filled the comb with 35 eggs. They tried to rear these eggs later on the ground but without success. During the flight only a few bees died.

The cell density of newly built combs was 860 cells the per 100cm? in orbit; 800 cells per 100cm’ on ground. After the first trials under micro gravity conditions the bees learned to take off properly, and to fly and land between the feeder and frames.

NEXT STEPS Pollination under micro gravity conditions As well as pure survival

in orbit, pollination of blooms by honeybees or bumblebees under micro gravity conditions has yet to be researched.

Propolis In a bee flight room no propolis can be collected as the neccessary plants or special trees are not . present. Maybe a new breed of trees of bonsai size

might be a solution?

Duration Survival for three years is not a problem for a queen bee. A bumblebee colony has a lifetime of several months. How to achieve the overlapping running of several bumblebee colonies over such a time duration still needs to be investigated.

Beekeeping, “Ambrosiushoeve”, in Hilvarenbeek, Netherlands, similar experiments were done with

Plants and crop rearing tests

bumblebees by Ing J van den Eijnde. Here bumblebees are reared for pollination in glasshouses.

on at NASA: cabbage, carrot, chard, dry bean, onion,

POLLINATION When plants bear fruits they must first bloom and be pollinated. Originally, this was done only by the wind, and plants that are wind pollinated require

Shuttle Mission

Survival of bees under micro gravity The influence of the absence of gravity on the survival, behaviour, and comb building capability

Chemistry and Biology of Social Insects, VerlagJ Peperny, Miinchen, Germany.

PRAAGH van,J P (1992) Towards

a

controlled-environment room

suitable for normal colony life of honeybees. Journal of Apicultural Research 11: pp 77-87.

Presently tests with the following plants are going peanut, radish, rice, soya bean, spinach, sweet and white potato, tomato, and wheat. Mission constraints are: crew time, shelf life, safety, storage, power, and food processing like flour grinding, baking bread, pressing oil from soya beans.

VANDENBERG, J D et al (1985) Survival, behaviour and comb construction by honey bees, Apis mellifera, in zero gravity aboard NASA Shuttle Mission STS-13. Apidologie 16: pp 369-384.

WITTE,G R, SEGER,J (1992) Hummelmanagement. Unterricht Biologie 174: pp 52-53.

PRAAGH van,J P (1995) Die Feuchtigkeit der Stockluft und die Bruttatigkeit der Bienen (Apis mellifera L) in einem Flugraum.

Pollination of apples in China (Uma and Tej Partap) B&D 54 (2000)

Apidologie 6: pp 283-293.

Successful pollination of apples (Uma Partap), B&D 48 (1998)

Useful reading in B&D

Beekeeping & Development 57

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