A Southern California school plants a 'Moon Tree' grown with seeds flown
in space
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[October 15, 2024]
By AMY TAXIN
LAKE FOREST, Calif. (AP) — To cheers and applause from kids wearing
spacesuits and star-studded T-shirts, a tree was planted in California
that is out of this world.
The so-called “Moon Tree” — grown with seeds that were flown around the
moon — was wheeled out in a wagon accompanied by several students
carrying shovels to help dig its new home at Santiago STEAM Magnet
Elementary School in Lake Forest.
The school, which has roughly 500 students in grades K-12, was among
those selected to receive a seedling for a giant sequoia that was grown
with seeds flown on NASA’s Artemis I Mission in 2022.
“It's kind of crazy,” said Emily Aguesse, a sixth grader who
participated in Monday's ceremony welcoming the tree. “I've always
wanted to go to space but this motivates it even more.”
It's the second time that NASA has flown seeds into space and brought
them back for planting. An astronaut for the Apollo 14 mission in 1971
who was a former U.S. Forest Service smokejumper carried seeds that
later were grown into the first generation of Moon Trees, which were
planted in states spanning from Alabama to Washington.
While many of those seedlings were distributed to national monuments,
this latest batch has been given to schools and museums to promote
science and conservation education and help bring space down to Earth,
said Paul Propster, chief story architect for NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory.
"It’s just kind of cool and fun to connect the next generation of
explorers," Propster said.
It isn't known whether space travel has an effect on how plants grow and
scientists continue to study the topic, he said.
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Students at Santiago STEAM Magnet Elementary School participate at a
ceremony to plant a small Giant Sequoia tree from NASA's Artemis I
Mission's tree seeds that traveled around the moon twice, after the
school was honored in the spring of 2024 to become NASA Moon Tree
Stewards in Lake Forest, Calif., on Monday, Oct. 14, 2024. (AP
Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
In 2022, NASA and the Forest Service flew nearly 2,000 seeds from
five species of trees aboard the unmanned Orion spacecraft, which
went into lunar orbit and spent about four weeks traveling in space.
Once back on Earth, the seeds were grown into young sycamores,
sweetgums, Douglas firs, loblolly pines and giant sequoias that
could be shared with the public through an application process.
Nearly 150 seedlings were distributed earlier in the year, and
another batch is expected this fall, NASA officials said.
Santiago — a science and technology-focused magnet school — planted
its tree in a space-themed outdoor garden decorated with colorful
stones painted by students. The school's parent and teacher
association will have community volunteers care for the Moon Tree,
which is expected to grow in girth and stature for decades amid a
grove of eucalyptus that shades the campus in Southern California.
Colorful ropes were laid in circles on the ground to show students
how big the tree could grow 50 years from now — and 500.
“This tree will grow with the kids," said Liz Gibson, who has three
children at the school and chaired the NASA Moon Tree ceremony.
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