Water Animals to be part of ISS Cargo

In News

NASA is preparing to send around 5,000 tardigrades, also called “water bears” and 128 glow-in-the-dark baby squid into the International Space Station for research purposes.

About

  • The water animals will be launched aboard SpaceX’s 22nd cargo resupply mission to the ISS.
  • They are part of experiments that could help scientists design improved protective measures for astronauts going on long-duration space travel.
  • The water bears and bobtail squid will be involved in experiments aboard the floating laboratory.
  • They will be arriving in a semi-frozen state before they are thawed out, revived and grown in a special bio-culture system.
  • The experiments are also aimed at better understanding how beneficial microbes interact with animals, potentially leading to breakthroughs in improving human health on Earth.

Significance

  • The researchers will be able to study water bears’ hardiness close up, and possibly identify the genes that allow them to become so resilient.
  • It would be possible to design better techniques to keep astronauts healthy on long-duration space missions by learning how the water bears can survive in low gravity conditions.
  • This will further help in understanding how microgravity conditions affect the relationship between the bobtail squid and beneficial microbes, as part of a study called UMAMI.
  • Microbes play a crucial role in the normal development of animal tissues and in maintaining human health.

Tardigrades

  • They are microscopic eight-legged animals that have been to outer space and would likely survive the apocalypse. They look like adorable miniature bears.
  • They are considered aquatic because they require a thin layer of water around their bodies to prevent dehydration.
  • They are covered in a tough cuticle, similar to the exoskeletons of grasshoppers, praying mantises, and other insects to which they are related.
  • They belong to an elite category of animals known as extremophiles, or critters that can survive environments that most others can’t.
  • They can also live at temperatures as cold as absolute zero or above boiling, at pressures six times that of the ocean’s deepest trenches, and in the vacuum of space.
  • They prefer to live in sediment at the bottom of a lake, on moist pieces of moss or in other wet environments.

 

Image Courtesy: Livescience
 

Source: IE