Cotton Yearbook 2019

Page 26

SECTION 1 OVERVIEW This section brought to you in association with

O V E R V I E W

B Y

A D A M A

First cotton plants sprout on the Moon

W

hen China’s Chang’e-4 spacecraft landed on the lunar far side on January 3, 2019, it made history. It was the first spacecraft to visit that part of the Moon, and among its payload was a 2.6 kg mini-biosphere called the Lunar Micro Ecosystem (LME). The sealed, cylindrical biosphere is only 18 cm long and 16 cm in diameter. The LME carried six lifeforms, kept in mostly earth-like conditions except for micro-gravity and lunar radiation.

• • • • • •

The LME carried: Cotton seeds; Potato seeds; Rape seeds; Yeast; Fruit fly eggs; and, Arabidopsis thaliana, a common, hardy weed.

This ground-breaking work by China is the first biological growth experiment on the Moon. Only the cotton seeds produced positive results. At first, the team behind this experiment thought that there was only one cotton leaf, but now data indicates there were two. The LME was unheated, so after the first lunar day – about 14 earth days – the cotton sprout died when the temperatures plunged to minus 190°C But the experiment continued, to test the longevity of the LME itself. In the past, experiments have been conducted aboard the International Space Station (ISS) and China’s Tiangong-2 space lab – where plants, rice and arabidopsis were cultivated. But these experiments took place in Low-Earth Orbit (LEO), which is a microgravity environment. The planners of the Chang’e-4 mission therefore sought to include an experiment that would test how organisms fared in lunar gravity.

The Chang’e-4 lander.

According to Professor Liu Hanlong – the Dean of Chongqing University’s School of Civil Engineering, who is leading the experiment – the first thing to sprout were the cotton seeds. An image sent back by the lander provided a glimpse inside of the experiment and showed a cotton sprout that was growing well, though no other plants appeared to be growing at the time. The results were then compared to an Earthbased control experiment, which showed much more substantial growth. While air pressure and a constant temperature of 25°C (77°F) are maintained inside the LME (as with the control group), the fact that it has to contend with less than 17 per cent of Earth gravity had some detrimental effects. On the next Chinese Moon mission, they hope to send more complex life forms, though they haven’t specified what they’ll be.

A sprouting cotton seed on China’s Chang’e 4 lunar lander is the first plant ever to germinate on another world, heralding a new era for life in space. 24 — COTTON YEARBOOK 2019

The bad news is that the Moon is as dry as the Murray-Darling basin at the moment, so doesn’t represent a potential new cotton production area.


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Articles inside

Up-to-date marketing information including Processing, Marketing, Merchants and Classing Organisations

1hr
pages 180-201

BCI’ s membership grows

2min
pages 178-179

Austr alian brands switch on to better cotton

2min
page 177

Converting low-grade cotton into gel with variable use qualities

5min
pages 174-176

CRDC list of current projects

16min
pages 163-169

A new crop of chinos at M.J. Bale

7min
pages 170-173

CottonInfo and Meet Our Team

4min
pages 161-162

Better dryland cotton yields with phosphorus

5min
pages 159-160

Burr breakthrough: Insights into Noogoora

9min
pages 154-158

Using drone technology to release beneficials in cotton

8min
pages 150-153

Help prevent spray drift with new crop mapping technology

3min
pages 136-139

myBMP underpins Australia’s cotton sustainability credentials

3min
pages 146-149

New Texas variety can be used for food and fibre

6min
pages 133-135

Seeing green on green: A new way to look at weed control

7min
pages 140-143

Local group takes creative approach to spray drift

2min
pages 144-145

Diversity extends herbicide ‘life’ in triple-stacked cotton

5min
pages 131-132

Cotton Landcare Tech-Innovations 2021

8min
pages 126-130

Australian Rural Leadership program

2min
pages 124-125

Nuffield scholars announced

2min
pages 122-123

Education plays a key role

5min
pages 114-117

Delungra growers taking cotton to new heights

19min
pages 100-103

The UNE/CRDC cotton course update and future plans

4min
pages 118-121

Microwaves: More bing for your weed control buck?

4min
pages 110-113

Cotton a profitable option on Maryborough cane farm

5min
pages 96-99

A year full of challenges

13min
pages 10-19

Noble gases and clever science equals better grasp on

11min
pages 82-89

Big year for Women in Cotton

7min
pages 20-25

Cotton production footprint getting bigger

2min
page 35

Megadrought caused mega biodiversity loss

2min
pages 94-95

First cotton plants sprout on the Moon

2min
pages 26-27

Predicted climate change impacts

10min
pages 30-34

A smorgasbord of travel

1min
pages 28-29
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