Beanbag
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jun 7, 2003
- Messages
- 3,468
Similar work has been done back in the Skylab days. They boosted goldfish up to Skylab to see how they would adapt to zero gravity. The initial boostees would swim around in random loops and positions, because their sensory gear was used to having a gravitational pull to orient itself with. Fish hatched in orbit adapted quite nicely, however, and would swim normally.
Flying animals would probably adapt better to zero gravity than non-flyers, since they are used to working in a three-dimensional environment and have a propulsion system that isn't dependent on having a solid surface to push against. They wouldn't so much fly as swim through the air. Birds taken from a 1-g environment would probably flail around like mad, since they no longer have gravity to work against and provide a reference for orientation. Birds hatched in zero g wouldn't have the same preconditioning, and should adapt in nicely. They'd be overdesigned physically, since most of the energy needed in flight is to overcome gravity and stay aloft.
Regards;
Beanbag
Flying animals would probably adapt better to zero gravity than non-flyers, since they are used to working in a three-dimensional environment and have a propulsion system that isn't dependent on having a solid surface to push against. They wouldn't so much fly as swim through the air. Birds taken from a 1-g environment would probably flail around like mad, since they no longer have gravity to work against and provide a reference for orientation. Birds hatched in zero g wouldn't have the same preconditioning, and should adapt in nicely. They'd be overdesigned physically, since most of the energy needed in flight is to overcome gravity and stay aloft.
Regards;
Beanbag