I suppose another way of looking at the question is: how important is gravity for the development of mammal fetuses?
And if things would go wrong, what sort of things would they be, and what would be the result?
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I suppose another way of looking at the question is: how important is gravity for the development of mammal fetuses? And if things would go wrong, what sort of things would they be, and what would be the result? |
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There is some evidence that fetal development under zero gravity conditions might be problematic.
The paper is here. These authors studied aspects of reproduction of mice in a clinostat under 10-3G. They found that fertilisation was unaffected, but that preimplantation development of the embryo was affected by the mG environment. The introduction to the paper gives a good brief review of this area of research. Perhaps of particular relevance is this section:
Schenker E, Forkheim K (1998) Mammalian mice embryo early development in weightlessness environment on STS 80 space flight. [This is the citation in the paper, and I am unable to find the full citation!] Serova LV, Denisova LA (1982) The effect of weightlessness on the reproductive function of mammals. Physiologist 25: S9–12. |
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