China to start Earth trials of space-bred seeds (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-09-26 23:00
BEIJING -- Chinese scientists are to start experimental cultivation of 2,200
seed samples from the country's seed-breeding satellite in a hope to grow
high-yield, high-quality plants, the Ministry of Agriculture (MOA) announced on
Tuesday.
Seeds from the Shijian-8 satellite which landed two days ago, were handed
over to Agriculture Minister Du Qinglin.
Tests showed the seeds had remained intact and could be used for plantation,
said agriculture experts. The seeds covered nine categories, including grains,
wheat, corn, cotton, vegetables, fruits, fungus and oil plants.
The ministry said the seeds would be dispatched to 94 agricultural centers
across the country for study of the influence of cosmic radiation and zero
gravity.
In the next three years, the acreage of crops cultivated from the seeds would
reach between 30 million mu (two million hectares) and 50 million mu (3.3
million hectares).
The Shijian-8 satellite was launched on September 9 to carry out experiments
aimed at discovering the effects of zero gravity on the germination and
sprouting of plants.
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