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Japanese Mars Diet Stinks PDF Print E-mail
Written by Erika Fredrickson   
Wednesday, 26 March 2008

For people planning to live on Mars sustainably, azolla might be the best food option. Japanese researchers have suggested this water fern is so rich in nutrients and takes so little energy to grow that it's the perfect otherworldly cuisine. It can double in size every four to five days, and when eaten it tastes like sprouts. Problem is, it smells really foul. Here on Earth, when it grows too much it can choke up canals and cause harm to fish.

Azolla is used as livestock feed on some organic farms. But even in this case, farmers recommend washing the fern to get the dung smell off. Japanese farmer, Takao Furuno uses it for his innovative rice and duck culture. It provides nitrogen for the rice and nutrients for the duck, and suppresses weeds. The duck then fertilizes the plant with its dung. Great, right? But as a space food it might take getting used to. Then again, so would living on Mars.

Other good Mars foods according to scientists:

  • cookies made from silkworm pupae
  • rice
  • sweet potato
  • soy beans
  • loach fish

Apparently these foods could be cultivated easily in a bioregenerative life support system. Who knew? Azolla seems great for sustainable farming. But can space travel and Mars life be sustainable in itself?

Sources: Acres Wild, Wired Magazine, New Scientist, BBC News UK

Comments (2)Add Comment
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space ecogeek
written by wesley bruce, March 28, 2008
Quote:
But can space travel and Mars life be sustainable in itself?


I'm both an ecogeek and a space geek and a life member of the National Space Society to boot. I believe space colonies can and must be sustainable.

Most don't know that a space station module was designed for the space station that would grow food and oxygen instead of shipping both in and dumping shiploads of trash to burn up in the atmosphere. NASA rejected it and chose the unsustainable path. It
0
...
written by wesley bruce, March 28, 2008
But can space travel and Mars life be sustainable in itself?


I'm both an ecogeek and a space geek and a life member of the National Space Society to boot. I believe space colonies can and must be sustainable.

Most don't know that a space station module was designed for the space station that would grow food and oxygen instead of shipping both in and dumping shiploads of trash to burn up in the atmosphere. NASA rejected it and chose the unsustainable path. It

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