Can humans reproduce in space? | BBC Ideas


Humans will travel to Mars within the next couple of decades.
That’s according to Nasa, anyway.
The ultimate goal? To live entirely independent of Earth.
Scientists are already developing technology that will enable us
to travel incredibly long distances
and keep us alive when we get there.
But if we really want to inhabit other worlds,
a major issue needs to be addressed.
Can we reproduce in space?
If humans had a base on Mars,
we couldn’t keep popping back 225 million kilometers –
a journey likely to take around seven months –
to have children on Earth.
Humans will need to have babies in space.
But space is a hostile environment for the human body,
with high levels of radiation, something both sperm and egg cells
are highly sensitive to.
Nasa recently sent the first samples of frozen human sperm to space.
The frozen cells were successfully reactivated, but showed DNA damage
and moved differently, which would likely reduce their chances
of fertilizing an egg.
More encouragingly, freeze-dried mouse sperm
that spent several months in space
produced a brood of healthy pups when fertilized back on Earth.
Although the sperm DNA had changed,
the damage was repaired upon contact with the female egg.
For a foetus to develop in space, however,
it would need to be protected from this harmful radiation.
Its rapid growth rate would make a baby particularly vulnerable
to genetic mutations, increasing the risk of childhood cancers.
And perhaps as significant as radiation in the long term
is time spent away from Earth’s gravity.
We know that low gravity causes astronauts’ muscles to atrophy,
bones to become less dense,
and the quantity of circulating blood in the body to decrease.
The first baby born off planet Earth will most likely be born on Mars,
where gravity is about 38% of Earth’s, which is bound to affect
both birth and development.
But if a child was born in microgravity,
for example on a space station,
the impacts would be much more pronounced.
For the sake of argument, let’s imagine this happening.
It’s thought that gravity helps shape parts of the inner ear
that plays an important role in balance and orientation.
Rat pups born after developing in space
couldn’t sense which way was up or down,
and microgravity would continue to pose challenges
for childbirth itself.
On Earth, there is always the option of a C-section.
But although medics have mended rats’ tails
and performed keyhole surgery on pigs,
no-one has ever been operated on in space.
Blood can spatter even more than it usually does on earth,
floating around unconstrained by gravity.
Or it can pool into a kind of dome around a wound,
making it hard to see what’s going on.
Today, if an astronaut needs emergency surgery,
they have to ditch their mission and return to Earth.
But expecting the birth was successful, a baby
growing up in microgravity would look, move and behave
very differently to one born on Earth.
There, a child would not learn to crawl,
but would instead learn to float,
propelling themselves using their arms.
Without a strict exercise regime,
it’s possible their bones and muscles would be smaller
in their lower body, yet bigger and stronger in their upper body.
Like astronauts, fluids in their bodies could travel upwards
into their chest and head, giving them a puffy face.
As a result, a child was born and raised in space
might never be able to live on Earth.
It’s possible they might not be able to walk, stand, or even breathe.
Earth’s gravity is so important to humans that it’s been described
as the identity of mankind.
Without it, a human subspecies would emerge
only able to survive in space?
Assuming all the physical challenges can be overcome,
There are other issues that would need to be considered.
What would be the impacts of raising a child in such an isolated
and extreme environment?
While the mother may be able to consent, the child cannot.
Is it ethical to raise human beings
who may never be able to set foot on planet Earth?
Right now, having a baby in space
may feel like something from a sci-fi film,
but ultimately, it’s a puzzle we have to solve
if we want to travel deeper into our solar system.
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