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Scientists grow plants in soil from Moon | See photos

The plant species Arabidopsis thaliana is seen at a University of Florida laboratory growing in a small amount of lunar regolith – soil from the moon – for about two weeks (via REUTERS)

Their study, published in the journal Communications Biology, also investigated how plants respond biologically to the Moon's soil, also known as lunar regolith, which is very different from soil found on Earth.

Scientists grow Arabidopsis thaliana plant at a University of Florida laboratory in a small amount of soil from the moon. (via REUTERS)

The researchers designed a simple experiment: plant seeds in lunar soil, add water, nutrients and light, and record the results.

To grow their tiny lunar garden, the researchers used thimble-sized wells in plastic plates normally used to culture cells. Each well functioned as a pot.

Once they filled each "pot" with approximately a gram of lunar soil, the scientists moistened the soil with a nutrient solution and added a few seeds from the Arabidopsis plant which is widely used in the research because its genetic code has been fully mapped.

Growing Arabidopsis in the Moon's soil allowed the researchers more insight into how the soil affected the plants, down to the level of gene expression.

The researchers found that nearly all the seeds planted in the lunar soils were able to sprout.

Plants grow on Moon's soil at a University of Florida lab (AP)

"We were amazed. We did not predict that. That told us that the lunar soils did not interrupt the hormones and signals involved in plant germination," said Anna-Lisa Paul, one of the study's authors and a research professor of horticultural sciences in UF/IFAS.

This research comes as NASA's Artemis Program plans to return humans to the Moon.

"Artemis will require a better understanding of how to grow plants in space," said Rob Ferl, one of the study's authors and a professor at UF Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (UF/IFAS).

"For future, longer space missions, we may use the Moon as a hub or launching pad. It makes sense that we would want to use the soil that is already there to grow plants," Ferl said.

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