A GREENHOUSE COLLABORATORY
Brad Bebout and Richard
Keller
The Ames Microbial Ecology/Biogeochemistry
Research Lab, in combination with the ScienceDesk team, has made significant
progress in realizing a greenhouse "collaboratory" which will be shared
by members of the NASA Astrobiology Institute's Early Microbial Ecosystems Research
Group (EMERG). The greenhouse facility is being used to maintain field-collected
microbial mats, as well as perform manipulations of these mats. Microbial mats,
extant representatives of Earth’s earliest ecosystems, are highly dynamic communities
of microorganisms exhibiting extremely high rates of metabolic processes.
Maintaining the structure and function of these communities outside of the natural
environment is therefore a challenge. Using the greenhouse constructed
on the roof of building N239, mats that resemble naturally occurring communities
have been maintained over a year after field collection. This year, it was determined
that the greenhouse-maintained mats sustain natural rates of biogeochemical
processes. This facility, therefore, is useful to support continued measurements
of the rates and conditions under which various trace gases are emitted and/or
consumed by microbial mats and stromatolites. The greenhouse mats will be used
to investigate the effects of early Earth environmental conditions on the rates
of trace gas production and consumption in the microbial mats, a period of Earth’s
history no longer available to us for direct measurement. These measurements
are also relevant to the search for life on extrasolar planets, where the most
promising search strategy involves the detection of possibly biogenic gases
using infrared spectrometry. Space-based interferometers, such as the Terrestrial
Planet Finder, should be able to resolve the spectra of several biologically
important trace gases in the atmospheres of extrasolar planets, possibly within
10-15 years.
The greenhouse represents
a unique facility and a unique resource to be shared among EMERG team members.
The team’s scientific objectives require multiple collaborators to conduct and
analyze measurements of mat parameters on a frequent basis over many weeks.
However, pragmatics and funding constraints inhibit the productivity of the
distributed team and prevent full utilization of the greenhouse. The construction
of a collaboratory – in which human scientists and intelligent agents work together
to perform experiments – will alleviate demanding proximity and time requirements
that effect productivity. Rather than placing the burden solely on local team
members, a collaboratory will enable an entire distributed investigator team
to share responsibility for experimentation and data collection.
With this motivation in
mind, we have begun construction of a collaboratory designed to enable the geographically
distributed group of EMERG scientists to plan greenhouse experiments, operate
scientific equipment, take experimental measurements, share results, and collaborate
in real time with remote colleagues. Intelligent software agents will assist
in the experimentation process, controlling the hardware, recording results,
and interacting with the scientists via email. As part of the initial hardware
development for the collaboratory, an X,Y,Z positioning table which is capable
of automatically positioning sophisticated instruments at any location in the
mats has been constructed. The instrument package currently includes microelectrodes,
a light sensor, chlorophyll fluorometer, a surface detection device, and a fiber
optic spectrometer. The positioning system, and the instrumentation package
is viewable over the internet (http://greenhouse.arc.nasa.gov) via a webcam
hooked up to a computer located in the greenhouse. Next implementation steps
involve controlling the positioning table and equipment remotely over the internet.
Figure 1: Diagrammatic representation
of the greenhouse collaboratory with photographs of the hardware already in
place. Click image to view larger image.
