NASA News National Aeronautics and Space Administration John F. Kennedy Space Center Kennedy Space Center, Florida 32899 AC 321 867-2468 _________________________________________________________________________ For Release: Sept. 28, 2001 Bruce Buckingham Kennedy Space Center 321/867-2468 KSC Release No.: 109 - 01 PATENTED PROCESS PROMISES INCREASED POTATO PRODUCTION A research team at the NASA/Kennedy Space Center lead by Dynamac Corporation has been issued a patent on a process for producing a vegetative and tuber growth regulator based on a Tuber Induction Factor (TIF) growth hormone that regulates growth in potato tubers. (Potato tubers are the buds from which new plant shoots arise.) Dynamac's Dr. Gary Stutte, a plant scientist, and Neil Yorio, a research scientist, both in the Advanced Life Support and Gravitational Biology office at KSC, studied several generations of a redskin variety of potato under laboratory conditions to determine their candidacy for growth and consumption in space. The research tracked the growth rate, energy and space consumption, and crop yield of the potatoes. "The use of a tuber growth regulator could increase seed potato production by 15 to 20 percent, and decrease the time to harvest by 20 percent," stated Stutte. "This process could be used for long-duration missions, such as a mission to Mars. The goal is to learn how to manage this natural compound efficiently and use it effectively to get less volume and more mass, reduce the cost for water and resources, and reduce the growth cycle." During the study, potato plants were grown hydroponically in a specially lighted and temperature-controlled plant growth chamber called the Biomass Production Chamber. The leafy green vegetation was exposed to light on top, while the roots remained under a cover in special trays containing a solution of water and nutrients necessary for growth. The "underground" stems, called stolons, developed small seed tubers that developed into potatoes and were harvested. Several generations of potatoes have grown over in this research chamber and the result is disease- and pesticide-free potatoes harvested almost every 21 days. Dr. Raymond Wheeler, a NASA plant physiologist who is working closely with Dynamac on the study explained, "The more we can understand the influence of growth regulating factors, such as the TIF, the better we can manage the systems for life support applications. "We have to ask ourselves questions regarding what the life support options are and what they will cost. One of the real driving factors is what the energy requirements will be for lighting. In our present studies with potatoes our goal is to try and gain the most efficient use of space and lighting." During the research, the potatoes were harvested, and the fluid used in the first growth was retained and reused for subsequent generations of potatoes. The research team found that the next generation of plants developed tubers faster because of the TIF, and produced less leafy vegetation. A 21-day cycle in the first generation became, in essence, a cycle representing 42 days of growth in the next generation. According to Stutte, the growth regulator could also be used here on Earth to produce certified virus-free potato seed stock that could be planted directly using commercial seeding equipment. -- end --