Potential of salt-accumulating and salt-secreting halophytic plants for recycling sodium chloride in human urine in bioregenerative life support systems
Autor: | Natalia Tikhomirova, Jean-Bernard Gros, Ch. Lasseur, N. A. Myasoedov, L. G. Popova, I.V. Gribovskaya, Sofya Ushakova, Yu. V. Balnokin, Yu.A. Kudenko, E.S. Shklavtsova |
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Rok vydání: | 2011 |
Předmět: |
Atmospheric Science
Salicornia europaea biology Sodium Aerospace Engineering chemistry.chemical_element Astronomy and Astrophysics Urine biology.organism_classification Horticulture Geophysics Nutrient chemistry Space and Planetary Science Halophyte Plant species General Earth and Planetary Sciences Bioregenerative life support system Life support system |
Zdroj: | Advances in Space Research. 48:378-382 |
ISSN: | 0273-1177 |
Popis: | This study addresses the possibility of growing different halophytic plants on mineralized human urine as a way to recycle NaCl from human wastes in a bioregenerative life support system (BLSS). Two halophytic plant species were studied: the salt-accumulating Salicornia europaea and the salt-secreting Limonium gmelinii . During the first two weeks, plants were grown on Knop’s solution, then an average daily amount of urine produced by one human, which had been preliminarily mineralized, was gradually added to the experimental solutions. Nutrient solutions simulating urine mineral composition were gradually added to control solutions. NaCl concentrations in the stock solutions added to the experimental and control solutions were 9 g/L in the first treatment and 20 g/L in the second treatment. The mineralized human urine showed some inhibitory effects on S. europaea and L. gmelinii . The biomass yield of experimental plants was lower than that of control ones. If calculated for the same time period (120 d) and area (1 m 2 ), the amount of sodium chloride taken up by S. europaea plants would be 11.7 times larger than the amount taken up by L. gmelinii plants (486 g/m 2 vs. 41 g/m 2 ). Thus, S. europaea is the better choice of halophyte for recycling sodium chloride from human wastes in BLSS. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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