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Growing Future Meals in Space Will Require Human Waste
In the future, farmers on the Moon and Mars will have a big challenge: how to grow healthy food in two extremely unhealthy environments. That’s because the soil on both worlds isn’t at all hospitable to plants and animals. Neither are other conditions. Both are irradiated worlds, Mars has a thin atmosphere and the Moon has none at all. So, how will future colonists on either world grow their food?
We could look toward the example shown by Matt Damon in “The Martian”. There, a stranded Marsnaut figures out how to grow potatoes using his own sewage, which turns out to be do-able according to experiments run by the International Potato Center and NASA few years ago. More recently, researchers led by Harrison Coker of Texas A&M worked with a team at NASA, tested a solution of recycled sewage products and how they interacted with simulated lunar and Mars regolith (soil). The NASA team, headquartered at Kennedy Space Center, is taking a deep look at what are called bioregenerative life support systems (BLiSS). These bioreactors and filters turn an artificial form of sewage into a solution rich in the kinds of nutrients that plants need to thrive. This work has immediate implications for people who will be living and working on the Moon and Mars in the future. That’s because people can easily furnish the waste products needed. With the upcoming Artemis missions to the Moon, the question of food production is assuming a high priority for long-term inhabitants.
“In lunar and Martian outposts, organic wastes will be key to generating healthy, productive soils, said Coker, the first author on a study of such systems. “By weathering simulant soils from the Moon and Mars with organic waste streams, it was revealed that many essential plant nutrients can be harvested from surface minerals.”
A simulated lunar greenhouse at NASA Kennedy Space Center is helping scientists solve the problem of growing food on the Moon, and ultimately Mars. Courtesy NASA.
What Do Plants Need?
The plant life on Earth needs a complex set of nutrients to thrive. For example, corn needs a great deal of nitrogen. Peas like potassium and phosphorus. Potatoes like both phosphorus and nitrogen. And, all planets need water. The researchers looked at what it would take to “enrich” Martian and lunar regoliths. It turns out, they need a lot. That’s because the soils are irradiated and in the case of Mars, rich in sulfur, ferric oxide, silicon dioxide, and magnesium. It’s also laced with high levels of perchlorates, which are toxic.
The first inhabitants of these worlds will need to bring their own food and sewage systems, and then work on making the local soils habitable for plants. That will take time and a lot of work, in addition to all the other projects they’ll need to fulfill, such as exploration and habitat building.
Of course, the future inhabitants could rely on hydroponics for a growth medium, and there have been a great many studies of such water-based systems. However, you do need a lot of water and the nutrient loads need to be quite high to produce food in great quantities. On the Moon, at least, astronauts could send back to Earth for supplies, but that’s going to be expensive and time-consuming. So, it’s likely that the first sets of explorers will depend on food from “home”. However, that can’t be a permanent solution, which is why scientists are looking at ways to make local soils good for farming in the long run.
*Studies of food growth in space go back many years. A variety of red potatoes called Norland were grown in the Biomass Production Chamber inside Hangar L at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida during a research study in 1992. Credit: NASA*
Better Farming Through Sewage and Chemistry
In the research led by Coker and the folks at NASA, scientists combined the BLiSS effluent they created with simulated Martian or lunar regolith (each called a simulant). Then, they stored the two different solutions in a shaker for 24 hours. The goal was to determine if the BLiSS effluents could essentially “weather” the regolith and provide a nutrient-rich growing solution.
It turns out that the weathered simulants supplied large amounts of essential plant nutrients. They including sulfur, calcium, and magnesium, and other metals, when interacting with both water and BLiSS solutions. In addition, looking at the simulant particles under a microscope revealed weathered features such as tiny pits forming in the lunar simulant and the Martian simulant becoming covered in nanoparticles. Both helped make the sharp minerals in the simulant less abrasive, showing successful weathering and a step toward a more soil-like material.
So, is recycling human sewage the solution for better off-world gardens? Not quite. Despite promising initial results, the next steps would need to include tests on actual lunar and Martian regoliths. They’re quite different from the simulants the scientists tested. It’s a good start, though, and provides crucial insights into a process that will be critical for sustaining human colonies in outer space. It may not be long before lunar citizens are snacking on watercress sandwiches and Mars colonists are growing their own corn, beans, and yes, potatoes, thanks to their own effluent products.
For More Information
How Recycled Sewage Could Make the Moon or Mars Suitable for Growing Crops
Human Exploration Beyond Low Earth Orbit: Staged Evolution of BLiSS Technologies
News
Orange County residents fear herbicides are poisoning waterways
Residents concerned about the possible poisoning of Orange County waterways with herbicides have been making their voices heard on Instagram and pressured the county into holding a meeting on the issue Monday night.
Their effort has exposed tensions between people who see the waterways as natural creeks and county officials who see them as flood channels.
Brent Linas, a 41-year-old tech sales director in San Juan Capistrano, launched the Creek Team OC Instagram account after seeing changes on his runs along San Juan and Trabuco creeks. Lush green reeds in the channel had suddenly turned brown and lifeless, and birds had disappeared.
Linas said when county officials ignored and brushed aside his complaints, he and others turned to social media.
“We want an end to the use of herbicides in our creeks,” Linas said. “This idea that we’re just going to spray, hose down these creeks and leave them dead is unacceptable.”
Brent Linas walks through foliage along the Trabuco Creek where no herbicide was sprayed.
The account has gained more than 4,600 followers in three weeks. Linas and other residents have filed requests for records detailing the chemicals the county uses to control vegetation in the waterways, such as glyphosate, triclopyr and imazapyr.
They have posted images of workers spraying chemicals and used artificial intelligence to make illustrations resembling movie posters and old-fashioned magazine ads, some with surfers under the slogan “Endless Herbicides.”
San Juan Creek meets the ocean beside the popular surf break at Doheny State Beach. Linas, who often takes his two kids there, said surfers are angry about the spraying and are helping make fliers.
Orange County Public Works officials defend their practices.
“Vegetation management in flood control channels is conducted to maintain flood protection capacity and protect public safety,” Dave Ahern, a spokesperson for the agency, said in an email. “When chemical treatments are used, they are applied in a limited and targeted manner, consistent with applicable regulations.”
The county will hold a town hall in Dana Point on Monday night to provide information and hear from the public.
County Supervisor Katrina Foley said she generally opposes using herbicides in waterways. Her district includes San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point and the flood control channels of San Juan Creek and Trabuco Creek.
Birds rest along San Juan Creek near Doheny State Beach in Dana Point.
“I would like us to use the least toxic alternative possible, wherever possible,” Foley said in an interview. At the same time, she said, the county must keep channels clear of vegetation and at full capacity to protect neighborhoods against flooding.
The county uses only herbicides approved by state water regulators and the federal Environmental Protection Agency, and crews do not spray during bird nesting season or when endangered Southern California steelhead trout may be swimming upstream to spawn, the supervisor said.
Documents obtained by the Creek Team detail chemicals used in 2024 to “eradicate nuisance weeds” in flood control channels, or “washes,” as many Southern Californians know them. They also show the county plans to spray herbicides on more than 2,000 acres in dozens of channels and basins this year, among them the Santa Ana River and Aliso Creek.
The State Water Resources Control Board regulates herbicide use on aquatic plants and grants permits with requirements for using these chemicals.
State records show that in 2024 the county violated rules by submitting data that was “incomplete, inaccurate, or inconsistent.” Orange County Public Works wrote that it was “conducting a thorough review” to ensure compliance.
The state water board allows glyphosate, the key ingredient in the herbicide Roundup, to be used on plants in waterways.
The weedkiller has come under increasing scrutiny as Bayer, Roundup’s maker, has faced thousands of lawsuits alleging it failed to warn people it could cause cancer. (In February, the company announced a proposed $7.25-billion settlement to resolve thousands of suits by cancer patients. President Trump’s recent order to increase domestic production of glyphosate has angered activists who previously supported him.)
Supervisor Foley said she learned the county used Roundup in San Juan Creek about a year ago and made a complaint. She said the county has not used that chemical since January 2025 in the San Juan and Trabuco flood channels.
Brent Linas started a community group called The Creek Team OC to speak out on social media about how the county is using herbicides in creeks.
A record obtained by residents shows that in July, workers sprayed different herbicides in San Juan Creek, including triclopyr and imazapyr. Totaling the gallons listed, Linas calculated they sprayed 8 tons — a figure he has repeatedly used in the campaign with the demand “Stop the Ecocide!”
Foley said it was actually 34 pounds of herbicide “diluted with 8 tons of water,” and that officials are trying to use the “least amount” possible. She is pushing the county to consider alternatives, including perhaps hand weeding or even grazing goats.
“My goal is to try to find every possible way that we can avoid using chemicals,” she said.
However, she doesn’t see the washes as natural creeks.
“The purpose of the channel is not to hold habitat,” she said. “The purpose of the channel is to accommodate water during a flood.”
Linas disagrees. He previously lived for years in San Diego County, where he ran along waterways teeming with birds among reeds, willows and sycamores.
Beachgoers play in the water at the mouth of the San Juan Creek as it flows into the Pacific Ocean.
In a post that garnered more than 17,000 likes, Linas asked: “Why do Orange County’s rivers look like this when San Diego’s rivers look like this?” He showed a barren creekbed filled with cobbles, then a green wetland filled with ducks.
San Diego County “lets rivers be rivers and ecosystems manage themselves,” Linas said. (A spokesperson confirmed that San Diego County Public Works manages vegetation in waterways by hand or using equipment.)
Linas said the spraying is “destroying these vital ecosystems” and posing health threats for people who live nearby. At a minimum, he said, the county needs to notify the public when workers are going to spray.
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Police kill carjacking suspect outside In-N-Out Burger in Laguna Hills

A man suspected of fatally shooting a woman outside an apartment complex in Carlsbad and stealing her SUV late Friday died early Saturday in a shootout with police in front of an In-N-Out Burger in Orange County.
Video taken at the restaurant on Avenida de La Carlota in Laguna Hills shows people inside running for cover. Patrons outside crouched under tables as gunshots rang out from the suspect and officers exchanging fire around 1 a.m.
One video briefly shows a man with short, dark hair and a red shirt running from the vehicle in the middle of the street toward the restaurant, with his hands apparently pointing toward the officers.
The Orange County Sheriff’s Department identified the dead man as Andre Anthony Matijasevic, 31, of Rancho Santa Margarita, a community in south Orange County. It’s not known what, if any, relationship Matijasevic had with the woman who was shot in Carlsbad, Sgt. Gerard McCann said.
McCann would not comment on how many officers were involved in the shooting or how many rounds were fired. A semiautomatic handgun with a wrapped grip and attached flashlight was found near Matijasevic, McCann said.
The SUV Matijasevic was driving became disabled in the middle of the road in front of the In-N-Out, McCann said. Matijasevic jumped out of the car and was running toward the restaurant when he was shot, but McCann said there did not appear to be any connection to the restaurant.
“It just happened to be where he decided to make his stand,” McCann said. “ …There are bullet holes in the windows of the police cars, so we know he shot at us.”
McCann said it will take time for investigators to determine how many shots were fired and who fired them.
The situation began around 9:53 p.m. Friday in Carlsbad when police responded to a report of gunfire in the parking lot of an apartment complex in the 2300 block of Rising Glen Way. When officers arrived, they found a woman with multiple gunshot wounds. Paramedics pronounced her dead at the scene, according to Carlsbad police.
The woman’s maroon Kia Sorento had been stolen, and the department sent the license plate number to surrounding jurisdictions, police said.
At 12:18 a.m., the Laguna Beach Police Department “received notification from a license plate reader at El Toro Road and Laguna Canyon Road that the vehicle was entering their city,” according to a sheriff’s department news release.
About 37 minutes later, officers in Newport Beach spotted the stolen vehicle near Newport Coast Drive and Pacific Coast Highway. The person driving did not stop when officers tried to pull the car over, and during the ensuing pursuit, an Irvine Police Department K-9 unit joined the chase, authorities said.
The pursuit continued to the southbound 5 Freeway, according to the sheriff’s news release, where the driver exited at El Toro Road, drove through a business complex and headed north on El Toro Road.
Police said the driver stopped the car in the middle of El Toro Road, just south of Avenida De La Carlota, got out of the vehicle and started firing at approaching police cars.
The suspect was taken to Providence Mission Hospital in Mission Viejo, where he was pronounced dead, McCann said.
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