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SpaceX launches more than 100 tiny squid into space

Friday, 4 June 2021

SpaceX launched thousands of tiny sea creatures to the International Space Station, along with a plaque-fighting toothpaste experiment and powerful solar panels.

The 3300kg shipment launched on Thursday (local time) – which also includes fresh lemons, onions, avocados and cherry tomatoes for the station’s seven astronauts – should arrive Saturday.

SpaceX’s Falcon rocket blasted into the hazy afternoon sky from Kennedy Space Centre. The first-stage booster was new for a change, landing on an offshore platform several minutes after liftoff, so it can be recycled for a Nasa astronaut flight this autumn (NZ spring).

Cargo on the Dragon 2 spacecraft includes samples of saliva and oral bacteria from dental patients that will be treated with toothpaste and mouthwash in an experiment aimed at keeping astronauts’ mouths healthy in space.
Cargo on the Dragon 2 spacecraft includes samples of saliva and oral bacteria from dental patients that will be treated with toothpaste and mouthwash in an experiment aimed at keeping astronauts’ mouths healthy in space.

The Dragon cargo capsule – also brand new – is delivering the first of three sets of high-tech solar panels designed to bolster the space station’s ageing power grid. Astronauts will conduct two spacewalks later this month to help instal the two roll-out panels alongside solar wings that have been in continuous operation for 20 years.

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Also headed to the orbiting lab: 20,000 tardigrades, better known as water bears, and 128 bobtail squid, as well as chilli pepper plants and cotton seedlings.
Also headed to the orbiting lab: 20,000 tardigrades, better known as water bears, and 128 bobtail squid, as well as chilli pepper plants and cotton seedlings.

More power will be needed to accommodate the growing number of ticket-buying visitors, Nasa’s space station program manager, Joel Montalbano, said Wednesday.

The cargo includes samples of saliva and oral bacteria from dental patients that will be treated with toothpaste and mouthwash in an experiment aimed at keeping astronauts' teeth and gums healthy in space.

“There’s no guarantee that the Earth methods will work in zero gravity,” researcher Jeffrey Ebersole of the University of Nevada Las Vegas said in a statement.

Also headed to the orbiting lab: 20,000 tardigrades, better known as water bears, and 128 bobtail squid, as well as chilli pepper plants and cotton seedlings.

Tardigrades can survive in drastic environments on Earth and even in the vacuum of space. Launched frozen, these microscopic extremophiles will be thawed and revived aboard the space station. By identifying the genes behind the animals’ adaptability, scientists hope to better understand the stresses on the human body during long space stays.

The baby bobtail squid are part of a study investigating the relationship between beneficial bacteria and their animal hosts.

This is SpaceX’s 22nd station supply run for Nasa. The space agency turned to private companies to transport cargo and astronauts following the shuttles’ retirement a decade ago.