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Advances in Space Research
Volume 41, Issue 5, 2008, Pages 730-735
Space Life Sciences
 
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doi:10.1016/j.asr.2007.09.005    
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Copyright © 2007 COSPAR Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Growth of sweetpotato cultured in the newly designed hydroponic system for space farming

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Y. KitayaCorresponding Author Contact Information, a, E-mail The Corresponding Author, H. Hiraia, X. Weia, A.F.M.S. Islama and M. Yamamotoa

aGraduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Osaka Prefecture University, Sakai, Osaka 599-8531, Japan


Received 13 December 2006; 
revised 18 July 2007; 
accepted 7 September 2007. 
Available online 17 September 2007.

Abstract

Life support of crews in long-duration space missions for other planets will be highly dependent on amounts of food, atmospheric O2 and clean water produced by plants. Therefore, the space farming system with scheduling of crop production, obtaining high yields with a rapid turnover rate, converting atmospheric CO2 to O2 and purifying water should be established with employing suitable plant species and cultivars and precisely controlling environmental variables around plants grown at a high density in a limited space. In this study, we developed a new hydroponic method for producing tuberous roots and fresh edible leaves and stems of sweetpotato. In the first experiment, we examined the effects of water contents in the rooting substrate on growth and tuberous root development of sweetpotato. The rooting substrates made with rockwool slabs were inclined in a culture container and absorbed nutrient solution from the lower end of the slabs by capillary action. Tuberous roots developed on the lower surface of the rockwool slabs. The tuberous roots showed better growth and development at locations farther from the water surface on the rockwool slabs, which had lower water content. In the second experiment, three sweetpotato cultivars were cultured in a hydroponic system for five months from June to November under the sun light in Osaka, Japan as a fundamental study for establishing the space farming system. The cultivars employed were ‘Elegant summer’, ‘Kokei-14’ and ‘Beniazuma’. The hydroponic system mainly consisted of culture containers and rockwool slabs. Dry weights of tuberous roots developed in the aerial space between the rockwool slab and the nutrient solution filled at the bottom of the culture container were 0.34, 0.45 and 0.23 kg/plant and dry weights of the top portion (leaves, petioles and stems) were 0.42, 0.29 and 0.61 kg/plant for ‘Elegant summer’, ‘Kokei-14’ and ‘Beniazuma’, respectively. Young stems and leaves as well as tuberous roots of ‘Elegant summer’ are edible and palatable. Therefore ‘Elegant summer’ would be a promising crop to produce large amounts of food with high nutritional values in the present hydroponic system in space farming.

Keywords: Aeration; Hydroponic culture; Space farming; Sweetpotato

Article Outline

1. Introduction
2. Materials and methods
2.1. Experiment 1: Growth of sweetpotato planted on the rooting substrate at different distances from the water surface
2.2. Experiment 2: Growth characteristics of three sweetpotato cultivars in a hydroponic system
3. Results and discussion
References









Corresponding Author Contact InformationCorresponding author.

Advances in Space Research
Volume 41, Issue 5, 2008, Pages 730-735
Space Life Sciences
 
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