Development of Insect Habitat System for Studying Long Duration Circadian Rhythm Changes on Mir Space Station

972311

07/01/1997

Event
International Conference On Environmental Systems
Authors Abstract
Content
A habitat for housing up to 32 Tenebrionid, black body beetles (Trigonoscelis gigas Reitter) has been developed at Ames Research Center for conducting studies to evaluate the effects of long duration spaceflight upon insect circadian timing systems. This habitat, identified as the Beetle Kit, provides an automatically controlled lighting system and activity and temperature recording devices, as well as individual beetle enclosures. Each of the 32 enclosures in a Beetle Kit allows for ad lib movement of the beetle as well as ventilation of the beetle enclosure via an externally operated hand pump. Two Beetle Kits were launched on STS-84 (Shuttle-Mir Mission-06) on May 15, 1997 and were transferred to the Priroda module of the Russian Mir space station on May 18 as part of the NASA/Mir Phase 1 Science Program. Following the Progress collision with Spektr on June 25, the Kits were transferred to the Kristall module. The beetles will remain on Mir for approximately 135 days. They will be returned to Earth on STS-86 in September, 1997, at the completion of the fifth U.S. astronaut long duration mission onboard Mir.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/972311
Pages
5
Citation
Savage, P., Hayward, E., Herrera, T., Connolly, J. et al., "Development of Insect Habitat System for Studying Long Duration Circadian Rhythm Changes on Mir Space Station," SAE Technical Paper 972311, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/972311.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jul 1, 1997
Product Code
972311
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English