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Human missions to the Moon and Mars will necessarily increase in both duration and complexity over the coming decades. In the past, short-term missions to low-Earth orbit (LEO) or the Moon (e.g., Apollo) utilized physiochemical life support systems for the crews. However, as the spatial and temporal durations of crewed missions to other planetary bodies increase, physiochemical life support systems become burdened with the requirement of frequent resupply missions. Bioregenerative life support systems (BLSS) have been proposed to replace much of the resupply required of physiochemical systems with modules that can regenerate water, oxygen, and food stocks with plant-based biological production systems. In order to protect the stability and productivity of BLSS modules (i.e., small scale units) or habitats (i.e., large scale systems), an integrated pest management (IPM) program is required to prevent, mitigate, and eliminate both insect pests and disease outbreaks in space-based plant-growing systems. A first-order BLSS IPM program is outlined herein that summarizes a collection of protocols that are similar to those used in field, greenhouse, and vertical-farming agricultural systems. However, the space environment offers numerous unusual stresses to plants, and thus, unique space-based IPM protocols will have to be developed. In general, successful operation of space-based BLSS units will be guided by IPM protocols that (1) should be established early in the mission design phase to be effective, (2) will be dynamic in nature changing both spatially and temporally depending on the successional processes afoot within the crewed spacecraft, plant-growing systems, and through time; and (3) can prevent insect/phytopathology outbreaks at very high levels that can approach 100% if properly implemented.
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Human crewed spacecraft since the Mercury and Gemini programs in the 1960’s utilized physical and chemical (i.e., called
However, we are now entering a new phase of human exploration of the solar system in which long-duration missions to the Moon and Mars begin to argue for ESM tradeoffs that will evolve away from small plant-growth payloads towards larger-scale BLSS habitats. For example, several space-based plant-growth modules are currently operational on the ISS for plant biology research and vegetable production for crews (
Small plant-growth payloads currently onboard the International Space Station (ISS).
Recently, such a scenario occurred on the ISS when cabin air containing infective propagules of the opportunistic phytopathogen,
An IPM program for space-based plant-growing systems will be proposed here that will be applicable to (1) small-scale plant-growth modules, (2) larger scale plant production systems that have multiple subunits of production but have not yet included waste management, and (3) full-scale BLSS habitats that include plant production and waste management. As the complexities of BLSS modules increase, the complexities of the IPM protocols required to maintain healthy crops will increase. Thus, it is beyond the scope here to propose any sort of comprehensive IPM program with precise specifications or protocols. Instead, the following discussions are intended as a first-order model of the types of IPM protocols that should be considered during currently planned crewed missions to the ISS, the Moon, and Mars over the next 25 years.
Historically, few outbreaks of phytopathogens have been observed in small-scale plant-growth modules, and no insect outbreaks have been noted. The primary reason for the previous success of keeping pests and diseases from developing in space-based plant habitats has been the utilization of closed or semi-closed production modules that were returned to Earth for post-flight processing and sanitation between missions (see reviews by
However, two naturally occurring disease outbreaks, and one directed plant-pathology experiment in space are noteworthy to discuss here. First, the fungus,
Recently,
To this list we can add several other factors that are likely to impact the health of crops in space-based BLSS. First, the spaceflight environment itself can alter plant and phytopathogen physiologies such that the combination could increase disease severity in space (
Second, the growth of saprophytic fungi on crop detritus during production or harvest cycles might increase the inoculum loads to levels that then overwhelm host resistance. For example, this problem has been observed in greenhouse-grown squash plants in which the typical saprophytic fungus,
The opportunistic fungus,
Occluded hydroponic irrigation lines after 5.25 years of operation at The Land, Epcot greenhouse facility located in central Florida (circa 1988).
And lastly, closed ecosystems, root hypoxia, high humidity, altered gravity, and allelopathy may be concomitant factors that increase plant stress, and thus, potentially alter host resistance to microbial phytopathogens in space. Of these factors, root and canopy hypoxia are well established as plant stressors in
In summary, a wide range of potential environmental or mechanical stressors—and indeed active phytopathogens—will likely impact the long-term stability of space-based BLSS modules in similar ways as these factors impact field, greenhouse, and vertical-farming agricultural systems on Earth. The spaceflight environment further adds a number of additional stressors that are not typically encountered on terrestrial surfaces due to the lack of a gravity-vector in space. In addition, the full range of physiological, anatomical, and genomic responses of both plants and their associated biological phytopathogens remains mostly unknown for space-based plant-growing systems and should be explored in the near-term with a wide range of directed plant host/phytopathogen experiments.
Spacecraft microbiome studies reveal similar species diversity and bioloads among diverse missions (see reviews by
Potential fungal phytopathogens in these studies include species of
The brief discussion above is by no means exhaustive, but it does highlight the possibility that a range of phytopathogens may be introduced into space-based BLSS and crewed habitats. Then why have not more plants succumbed to disease outbreaks? Two factors are in play. First, the question is partially answered by the concept of the
In contrast to the development of phytopathogens on plants in space, the presence of phytophagus entomological species may be a serious issue because insects that feed on plants are typically generalists without a focused host-range. Although, the emphasis here is to propose IPM practices that are applicable to the development of plant diseases in space-based BLSS, insect pests should not be ignored. For example, the five most common insect pest in greenhouse crops are aphids, leaf miners, spider mites, thrips, and white flies of numerous species (
Common airborne insect pests (except spider mites) of greenhouse hydroponic systems that are also possible as infestations in space-based BLSS habitats.
Second, the ability to vector phytopathogens needs to be considered for typically non-phytophagus insects. For example, fruit flies, fungus gnats, and shore flies are well known to act as vectors for a wide range of phytopathogens including
In summary, searching for and identifying insects present in the ISS habitat should be a near-term research goal. It is likely that phytophagus insects have been periodically introduced into the Mir and ISS space stations but have not caused problems because they did not survive long enough to colonize plants grown in open plant-growth modules like the Veggie system. However, as crop production becomes a more permanent fixture in space-based crewed habitats, insects that can vector phytopathogens must be studied in order to evaluate the risks to BLSS plant production.
The following is an outline for an IPM program for space-based plant-growth modules (e.g., APH, Veggie) and large-scale BLSS habitats for future crewed missions to the Moon and Mars. A comprehensive spaceflight IPM program is not specified here because modifications of the concepts below will be achieved through the implementation processes for future missions. Furthermore, aspects of the following IPM program will be adopted differentially for specific missions based on previous flight experience with plant growing systems and the risks of failure to the life-support systems for new missions. As higher plants are adopted for an increasing proportion of the crew’s life-support requirements—and for longer-term missions—pest and disease management should become a priority.
The following concepts will apply to almost all plant-growth systems in space regardless of size. However, as crop-production systems increase in size, complexity, and long-term use, these IPM protocols will become more complex and require significant preplanning for mission success. The following principles for BLSS/IPM protocols are adapted from
Although traditional pesticides are an important component of field and greenhouse agricultural systems, it is proposed here that traditional pesticides should not be used in closed BLSS habitats in space due to the immediate effects (i.e., direct biotoxicity to astronauts) and biomagnification (i.e., increased concentrations through trophic levels) of toxic compounds in the closed ecosystems of spacecraft. However, some materials may be certified for use within closed ecosystems for the sanitation of hardware or plant surfaces. For example, during the
Although plant parasitic nematodes, exotic phytopathogens (e.g., mycoplasma, spirochaetes), and many obligate biotrophic phytopathogens (e.g., corn smut, downy mildew, lettuce big vein virus) are likely not to be introduced into BLSS modules due to IPM sanitation and exclusion protocols, it remains plausible that they can be.
Allelopathy may be an issue in crops that share common nutrient loops and should be studied in pre-flight ground research of polycultures.
There are at least four key epidemiological strategies for disease control in BLSS habitats. First, prevent, eliminate, or reduce inoculum loads to tolerable levels. If infective propagules are not present within the crop production systems, then plants can avoid specific phytopathogens (i.e., called
Space-based hardware, ISS modules, and full-scale Mars spacecraft are (or will be) assembled under controlled conditions within cleanrooms of increasing stringency of dust mitigation depending on mission criteria (e.g.,
The Columbus module (launched on 11-Feb-2008) was assembled in a
The Biosphere 2 complex in Oracle, AZ was assembled in an
Large-scale space BLSS habitats should be compartmentalized with separate nutrient and air recirculation systems in order to manage sets of crops under optimum conditions (e.g., warm- versus cool-temperature crops), and to isolate units if an insect outbreak or disease epidemic occurs.
The following are general principles for the ecology of phytopathogens that individually, or in combination, might be utilized for preventing or mitigating disease outbreaks in space-based BLSS. i) Most fungi enter hosts tissues actively utilizing their endogenous energy reserves in spores to gain footholds in host tissues. ii) Most bacteria and viruses enter hosts tissues via vectors or passively through mass flow of water into leaves, stems, or roots. iii) Excluding vector-mediated infections, most phytopathogens require free moisture on susceptible tissues for infection, and thus, humidity control within a canopy is a key component of any IPM program for BLSS crops. iv) Over fertilization (e.g., high N and P) will often promote disease development in crops. v) High K and Ca fertilization will often suppress disease development by strengthening cell wall structures. vi) Continual use of monocultures over time and space may increase inocula loads of phytopathogens in BLSS modules and could lead to the loss of host resistance. Thus, utilize crop rotation, genetic diversity in crop cultivars, and polycultures to prevent specific phytopathogens from developing into epidemics in BLSS crops. Crop rotation might include changing specific cultivars of one crop-type with divergent resistance genes or rotating to other crop species in time and location. vii) Optimum temperatures for disease development are typically in the 25–30°C range. Thus, holding crops under slightly cooler conditions (i.e., <25°C) often can suppress the development of many diseases. viii) Optimum relative humidity (RH) for disease development is >80%, with the presence of free-standing water on leaves and stems the most problematic. Thus, maintaining canopy humidities ≤70% RH will decrease both the incidence and severity of canopy infections. ix) Phytopathogens are most likely to be introduced into BLSS habitats by the following routes (in priority): (1) airborne; (2) human-transmitted via equipment, food, clothing, or hardware; (3) insects missed by exclusion protocols, (4) seed (most can be sanitized prior to flight), and (5) vegetative transplants (if not properly processed through tissue-culture techniques). x) There is generally a xi) Polygenic resistance is regarded as more durable than isogenic resistance (
There are several high-criticality phases for initiating a system-wide BLSS IPM program and include the following: (1) hardware design, (2) horticulture design phase, (3) payload and subsystem construction, (4) pre-launch protocols of assembled hardware, (5) crew training and experience in agricultural activities, (6) crop production, and (7) harvest and waste processing. The following are brief discussions of the IPM protocols that might be adopted during the hardware design phase of the BLSS subsystems.
Use anti-microbial tubing, films, and surfaces to keep microbial biofilms managed within the nutrient and water irrigation subsystems.
However, plan for the eventual occlusion of nutrient and water delivery subsystems, and thus, plant production hardware would benefit from being modular, easily assembled/disassembled, and easily sanitized (i.e., not requiring sophisticated or complex sterilization equipment or protocols).
Excellent air flow through crop canopies would decrease internal canopy humidity levels. BLSS crop-production units would benefit from air flowing upward from the plant crowns; if such air flow dynamics can be easily designed into the systems.
Temperature (<25°C) and humidity (≤70% RH) control systems should be designed into long-term BLSS hardware whenever possible.
Irrigation of plant roots would benefit from minimal splashing or release of liquid nutrient solutions (even in a gravity-well like the Moon or Mars) in order to prevent algal or microbial blooms on hydrated surfaces.
Avoid the design of one large-scale BLSS habitat with common air, water, and nutrient loops. If BLSS modules can be designed with isolated loops, the chances of losing the entire BLSS habitat due to a mechanical or biological failure is significantly reduced. However, it is obvious that the ESM trade-offs between one large BLSS approach versus isolated modular subunits will factor into the eventual design of such systems.
Plant roots require dissolved oxygen in nutrient solutions. The saturated dissolved pO2 at 25°C on Earth at 1 g is approx. 7–8 ppm if nutrient solutions are aerated during recirculation. If a physical substrate is used for irrigation and plant support (e.g., Moon or Mars regolith (
All crops require frequent scouting to maintain optimum conditions for crop health free of insect infestations and disease outbreaks. It is beyond the scope of the current effort to go into detail on scouting protocols. Suffice it to note here that automatic remote sensing systems will likely be required to monitor crop health over time.
And lastly, rapid disease diagnostic tools are required for space-based diagnoses of phytopathogens such that the flight and ground crews can rapidly respond to specific issues (see
Symptoms of calcium tip burn versus bacterial soft rot.
In parallel to the physical design and construction of the BLSS hardware, horticultural activities will be developed to select a diversity of crops that will be compatible with the hardware. It cannot be over-emphasized that the hardware and horticultural design landscapes must be interwoven during the prelaunch phase to optimize all activities for mitigating disease outbreaks. The following suggestions are for the horticultural design phase of the BLSS habitat.
Select crop cultivars with resistance to known or anticipated phytopathogens. For example, to-date
Avoid high-pollen producing crops because dispersed pollen can act as a rich organic food base for weak or opportunistic phytopathogens (see examples in
Select crops for high harvest indices to reduce waste detritus at harvest. Senescent biomass is another easy source of proliferating saprophytic bacteria and fungi in closed ecosystems, and thus, should be either collected quickly and sterilized or avoided by developing crops with high harvest indices.
Avoid crops with succulent flower blossoms, fruit, or other structures because many phytopathogens (e.g.,
Avoid selecting crops with high levels of leaf guttation because the free water droplets along leaf margins may serve as sites for bacterial or fungal infections.
Crop rotation is a very effective IPM protocol to keep inoculum loads low in crop production systems due to the constantly changing genetic diversity of host tissues.
Select at least three genetically dissimilar cultivars of each crop to provide genetic diversity during the mission. The preferred cultivar could be grown until a phytopathological issue arises, upon which the crew could switch to other cultivars or crops.
Sanitize all seeds for both external microbial contamination and internal endophytic phytopathogens (e.g.,
Avoid the use of organic-rich rooting substrates (e.g., peat moss) because microbial blooms are more likely to occur in organic rich materials and such blooms can interfere with essential nutrient uptake for plants. Furthermore, peat moss can harbor pathogens and insect pests more easily than inorganic substrates (e.g., rockwool).
Once crop production hardware is constructed, and the crop cultivars selected, the next most crucial phase to mitigate down-stream pathology issues is the pre-launch handling of payloads, spacecraft processing personnel, and astronauts. The following are brief discussions of a number of pre-launch IPM protocols that should be considered for both small-scale payloads (e.g., APH, Veggie) and complex BLSS modules. However, as mission criteria become aligned with utilizing BLSS habitats for significant amounts of regeneration of O2, water, and food stocks, the risks of losing the BLSS functionality will increase, and thus, so too will the utilization of IPM protocols available to the ground and flight crews.
All flight hardware should be sterilized or sanitized prior to launch and kept in sealed bio-isolation wraps or containers to prevent recontamination. Such an approach will assure that the hardware itself is not the source of new phytopathogens.
All personnel handling flight hardware—even if they are not directly involved in handling BLSS crop production equipment—should be aware that they can act as vectors for both insects and phytopathogens into space launch systems, crewed habitats, and crop-production payloads. For example, individuals that handle tobacco products can frequently act as vectors of plant viruses like tomato mosaic virus (
Insect barriers should be erected at the sites of launch vehicle ingress and egress to prevent flying insect pests from entering spacecraft prior to launch. A single air-curtain might not be adequate in all cases, and a double-exclusion barrier (i.e., a 2-stage cleanroom approach in which the spacecraft technicians and crew swap out street clothes for cleanroom garments in an anteroom before passing through an air-flushing and filtration room) might be considered if the threat from insect pests is documented. If a full-scale BLSS habitat gets a severe insect infestation (e.g., by spider mites or white flies), it would be very difficult to eliminate the infestation short of shutting the whole crop production system down and rebooting the BLSS habitat.
During each mission that utilizes a plant-growth module (e.g., APH and Veggie;
A Mars-based BLSS module that uses transparent walls similar to a terrestrial greenhouse can provide significant amounts of water, O2, and food recycling on other planetary bodies. Although humanity may be several decades away from such complex bases on Mars, activities on the ISS are paving the way for the design, flight, and operation of planetary BLSS habitats. (Photo credit: by B. Versteeg/
Environmental manipulation is the best and easiest way to interfere in the disease triangle combination of factors that leads to disease development. Thus, (1) keep ambient RH ≤ 70% in crop canopies, (2) raise or lower temperatures (i.e., ideally with separate root and shoot temperature control subsystems), when feasible to move outside the conducive ranges of the phytopathogens being encountered, (3) avoid BLSS operations that create dew or standing water on crop canopies, and (4) keep root zone pO2 near saturation to promote healthy root systems.
Operate LED lighting systems, air-circulation, horticultural practices, and environmental controls to minimize open wounds on plants created during pruning activities. For example, crops should be pruned when canopies are dry, and leaf pruning should be directed at leaf abscission layers (when possible). If pruning cuts are made distal to the abscission layers of leaves, and leaf canopies are under high-humidity conditions, the cut bases of the petioles can act as sites for colonization by many fungi and bacteria. The microbial colonization of dead tissues that remain connected to stems is an easy route into the main stems of plants for aggressive phytopathogens (e.g.,
Frequent sanitation of pruning equipment should be maintained during the missions to avoid the microbial contamination of the cutting surfaces. As the bioburden on the shears or scissors builds up, the chances of vectoring a traditional or opportunistic phytopathogen increases.
Senescent crop detritus should be avoided by selecting crops with high-harvest indices and by removing dead tissues as frequently as possible.
Edible portions of harvested crops should be produced on a
Insects can be attracted by UV, blue, and yellow lights. Thus, small-scale and low-power insect traps should be developed that are strategically placed within BLSS habitats to draw flying insects away from crop production modules for capture.
Sanitize the crop production equipment and surfaces between crops. And where feasible, sanitize the internal nutrient flow plumbing to reduce or eliminate microbial biofilms.
Degrade, recycle, or remove crop detritus as quickly as possible after final harvests to prevent colonization of the detritus by saprophytic fungi and bacteria. If this process can be completed quickly, the removal of the detritus will act to suppress microbial blooms within BLSS equipment.
Crop detritus should also be heat-sterilized before reuse within nutrient recapture hardware, waste processing cycles, or incorporation into regolith growing media.
The following brief case studies are given as first-order IPM programs for plant-growth modules (i.e., small scale) and BLSS habitats (i.e., large scale). Most of the IPM protocols or concepts given above are, in principle, applicable to all plant-growing systems currently on the ISS or to be built for future crewed missions to the Moon and Mars. In addition, small-scale modules will always be more easily managed for insect and disease problems than large-scale BLSS habitats. However, IPM programs must be (1) established early in the mission design phase to be effective, (2) will be dynamic in nature changing both spatially and temporally depending on the successional processes afoot within the crewed spacecraft through time; and (3) can prevent insect/phytopathogen outbreaks at very high levels of success that can approach 100% if properly implemented.
A semi-closed plant-growth module like the APH unit (
Although open-agricultural systems like Veggie will undergo a short grace-period when first launched—over time—the systems will begin to encounter more problems as the hardware begins to receive microbial contamination from the ISS microbiome. Open systems will require the same startup IPM protocols described above for the APH but will also require additional sanitation and sterilization scrutiny over time including: (1) replacement of uncleanable parts; (2) fallow periods of time to help break insect and pathogen life-cycles; (3) crop-rotation to avoid sequential monocultures of one crop in any specific Veggie unit; (4) multiple cultivars available to respond to disease outbreaks; and (5) remove individual plants that exhibit severe stress, insect infestations, or disease outbreaks as soon as possible after detection.
Currently, there are two Veggie (
In the BLSS literature discussed above (e.g.,
For example, in the BLSS module depicted in
In addition, a Mars mission can be broken down into three phases for spacecraft and crew operations: (1) outbound transit from Earth-to-Mars, (2) surface operations using one or more bases and rovers, and (3) an inbound Mars-to-Earth transit. The outbound transit to Mars is the most critical to assure that no insects are hitchhiking along as unwanted interlopers. If the 6–8 months outbound transit phase is free of insect infestations, then the crew rotation protocols will likely not be required. However, if outbound BLSS modules encounter either severe insect infestations and/or disease outbreaks, the crews and BLSS hardware within the outbound leg should be mothballed approx. 3–4 weeks prior to arrival in Mars orbit to break the insect and disease life cycles.
In the
Furthermore, any given set of IPM protocols might also have different levels of
Bioregenerative life support systems that utilize higher plants for the recycling of O2, water, and food biomass have significant ESM advantages over pure P/C systems due to the reductions in resupply missions. Plant production science in the spaceflight environment has a long and storied history that began in the mid-1960’s. However, a full-scale BLSS habitat with fully integrated food production, O2 regeneration, and waste recycling subsystems has not yet been designed, built, or tested. As the science and technologies continue to be developed over the next decade, IPM programs for both insect pests and phytopathogens need to be developed in parallel with plant production technologies to assure crew safety for missions that leave the Earth/Moon system.
The IPM protocols and approaches discussed above represent a first-order IPM model for BLSS hardware and habitats. The individual IPM components can be used alone or in combination to help reduce the risks of losses from insects and phytopathogens. With a carefully integrated IPM program woven into BLSS technologies and operations, the risks of catastrophic failures can be dramatically reduced (i.e., possibly to near zero). Moreover, if an insect pest or phytopathogen outbreak does occur, preestablished IPM protocols on the outbound spacecraft (e.g., sanitation wipes, crop diversity, compartmentalization, etc.) will likely make it manageable without compromising the mission.
The future of space exploration is very exciting with both commercial and government organizations working toward missions to the Moon and Mars. However, as the space transportation systems begin to achieve fruition, the development of sustainable life support systems become imperative. Thus, the next decade will fit into space history as a key phase of human dispersal into the Solar system. We need to be prepared to support increasing populations of humans on multiple missions using BLSS approaches to reduce the Solar System wide ESM of all activities. Integrated Pest Management fits directly into the development of BLSS habitats and offers to significantly increase the ecological stability and reliability of plant-based life support systems.
The original contributions presented in the study are included in the article/supplementary material, further inquiries can be directed to the corresponding author.
Written informed consent was not obtained from the individual in Figure 1 because it is standard NASA policy to name astronauts in public-domain photos. Thus, no consent was required.
AS envisioned, wrote, and edited the entire paper as presented above.
Funding support for the creation of this work was provided by the Southeastern Regional Universities Association (Grant #80KSC017C0012) as partial support for a visiting scientist program to NASA, Kennedy Space Center, FL.
The author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article, or claim that may be made by its manufacturer, is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.
The author would like to thank Fred Pettit (Science Director for Epcot, Lake Buena Vista, FL, United States); Lance Osborne and Lyle Buss (Entomology & Nematology Department, University of Florida); NASA; and the United States Department of Agriculture for photographs used in this publication.