3.8 Review

Gardening for Therapeutic People-Plant Interactions during Long-Duration Space Missions

Journal

OPEN AGRICULTURE
Volume 2, Issue 1, Pages 1-13

Publisher

DE GRUYTER POLAND SP Z O O
DOI: 10.1515/opag-2017-0001

Keywords

Bioregenerative; Cognition; Countermeasure; Food Crop; Horticultural Therapy; Mental Health; Nature; Natural Environment; Psychological Stress; Spaceflight

Funding

  1. Department of Environmental Horticulture
  2. Gene and Barbara Batson Endowed Nursery Fund

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Plants provide people with vital resources necessary to sustain life. Nutrition, vitamins, calories, oxygen, fuel, and medicinal phytochemicals are just a few of the life-supporting plant products, but does our relationship with plants transcend these physical and biochemical products? This review synthesizes some of the extant literature on people-plant interactions, and relates key findings relevant to space exploration and the psychosocial and neurocognitive benefits of plants and nature in daily life. Here, a case is made in support of utilizing plant-mediated therapeutic benefits to mitigate potential psychosocial and neurocognitive decrements associated with long-duration space missions, especially for missions that seek to explore increasingly distant places where ground-based support is limited.

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