http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20090218/120203420.html

*Mosquito survives in outer space
*
*MOSCOW*. (RIA Novosti commentator Alexander Peslyak) - Preparations are
underway for a manned mission to Mars.

Cosmonauts who might fly to the Red Planet are learning how to survive in a
forest outside Moscow. Scientists from the Russian Academy of Sciences'
Institute of Medical and Biological Problems are assessing the impact of
cosmic radiation on living organisms, one of which even managed to survive
in outer space.

Anatoly Grigoryev, vice president of the Russian Academy of Sciences, told
RIA Novosti that a mosquito had managed to survive in outer space. First, it
appeared that Grigoryev was talking about a spider running loose aboard the
International Space Station. Incredibly, a mosquito slept for 18 months on
the outer ISS surface. "We brought him back to Earth. He is alive, and his
feet are moving," Grigoryev said.

The mosquito did not get any food and was subjected to extreme temperatures
ranging from minus 150 degrees Celsius in the shade to plus 60 degrees in
the sunlight.

Grigoryev said the insect had been taken outside the ISS on orders from the
Institute's scientists working on the Biorisk experiment. "First, they
studied bacteria and fungi till a Japanese scientist suggested studying
mosquitoes," Grigoryev told RIA Novosti.

Since 2005, the Institute has been cooperating with two Japanese institutes
under a grant and has been studying biological objects with preset
properties, including barley and peas with high genetic resistance.

"Professor Takashi Okuda from the National Institute of Agro-Biological
Science drew our attention to the unique, although short-lived, African
mosquito (bloodworm), whose larvae develop only in a humid environment,"
Grigoryev said.

Rains are rare in Africa, where puddles dry up before one's eyes. However,
this mosquito is well-adapted to adverse local conditions, existing in a
state of suspended animation when vital bodily functions stop almost
completely.

When suspended animation sets in, water molecules are replaced by tricallosa
sugar, which leads to natural crystallization. The larvae were then sprayed
with acetone, boiled and cooled down to minus 210 degrees Celsius, the
temperature of liquid nitrogen. Amazingly, they survived all these
hardships.

The Japanese also studied bloodworm DNA and found that it could be switched
on and deactivated in 30 to 40 minutes. "This is facilitated by the
crystallization of biological matter," Doctor of Biology Vladimir Sychev
from the Institute of Medical and Biological Problems told RIA Novosti.

Dr. Sychev said scientists were interested in this mechanism, which makes it
possible to assess the potential of living organisms subjected to multiple
loads in outer space.

He said plant studies had made headway, but that living organisms were
affected by gravitation, radiation and temperature fluctuations.

In the summer of 2007, Russian cosmonauts Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov
placed a gray cylinder with 24 cups containing barley seeds, bacteria,
crustaceans (Dafnia Magna), bloodworm larvae and other biological objects,
on the outer ISS surface. More than a year later, cosmonauts Sergei Volkov
and Oleg Kononenko removed the cylinder and returned it to Earth.

The unique Biorisk experiment made it possible to study the impact of
vacuum, subzero and hot temperatures and radiation on biological objects. It
is impossible to simulate these processes, Dr. Sychev stressed.

He said scientists were planning to send a number of microorganisms to
Phobos, one of the Mars moons, under the Phobos-Grunt program, and to return
them to Earth. This will make it possible to assess their survival and
reversible suspended-animation mechanisms.

Dr. Sychev also discussed various findings of the Biorisk project. First, it
appears that panspermia, the hypothesis that "seeds" of life already exist
all over the Universe, that life on Earth may have originated through these
"seeds," and that they may deliver or have delivered life to other habitable
bodies, is quite plausible.

Second, it is becoming possible to choose various methods and options for
placing biological objects in a state of suspended animation and
transporting them on long-duration space missions. An interplanetary Noah's
Ark would probably contain crystallized animals and other living organisms,
thereby reducing feeding costs.

Although this is still in the realm of science fiction, researchers are
currently preparing to sum up Russian and Japanese findings.


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