Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
The very, very boring habit that’s key to losing more weight: study

The very, very boring habit that’s key to losing more weight: study

March 26, 2026
Meta, Google face ‘Big Tobacco’-like reckoning after landmark verdicts on social media addiction

Meta, Google face ‘Big Tobacco’-like reckoning after landmark verdicts on social media addiction

March 26, 2026
OpenAI shelves erotic chatbot ‘adult mode’ indefinitely after uproar over user safety: report

OpenAI shelves erotic chatbot ‘adult mode’ indefinitely after uproar over user safety: report

March 26, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • The very, very boring habit that’s key to losing more weight: study
  • Meta, Google face ‘Big Tobacco’-like reckoning after landmark verdicts on social media addiction
  • OpenAI shelves erotic chatbot ‘adult mode’ indefinitely after uproar over user safety: report
  • Exclusive | DOJ launches investigation of trans prisoners raping women in California, Maine
  • Stefanik presses Michigan president on Chinese student spy security audit
  • ‘Office air’ could be making you ugly, experts warn — as ragged workers sound off after viral TikTok post
  • Dolores Catania Was a ‘Mama Bear’ to ‘RHORI’ Cast, Says They Gave ‘100 Percent’ to Show (Exclusive)
  • ‘Quad God’ Ilia Malinin rebounds from Olympics disaster at figure skating world championships
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Astronauts may struggle to reproduce in outer space, study suggests — what does that mean for the future of space colonization?
Astronauts may struggle to reproduce in outer space, study suggests — what does that mean for the future of space colonization?
Science

Astronauts may struggle to reproduce in outer space, study suggests — what does that mean for the future of space colonization?

News RoomBy News RoomMarch 26, 20261 ViewsNo Comments

When it comes to successful fertilization, zero gravity means zero game, a new study suggests. When looking at sperm and eggs in simulated microgravity, scientists found that this environment hampered sperm navigation, fertilization and embryo development, posing serious challenges for the future of space colonization.

This human, mouse and pig study, published Thursday (March 26) in the journal Communications Biology, revealed that sperm became disoriented, mouse eggs had fewer successful fertilizations, and pig embryos experienced developmental delays, all due to microgravity.

The findings have big implications for building a lasting human presence off Earth. The long-term settlements planned for the moon and Mars depend not just on keeping astronauts alive but on whether people can eventually reproduce there.

Article continues below


You may like

Sperm in microgravity

Previous studies have shown that microgravity can impair estrogen production and lower sperm count in mice. But what goes on at a cellular level when the sperm and egg float in near-zero gravity remains unclear.

To simulate microgravity, the researchers used a device called a clinostat machine, which works “by continuously rotating cells or samples in multiple directions, essentially randomising the direction of gravitational pull so rapidly that the cells never get a chance to settle or orient themselves,” Nicole McPherson, a researcher who runs the Sperm and Embryo Biology Group at Adelaide University’s Robinson Research Institute and the study’s senior author, told Live Science via email. “From the cell’s perspective, there is no consistent ‘up’ or ‘down’, it experiences a kind of continuous free fall, which closely mimics what living cells experience in the weightlessness of space.”

With their space simulator, the researchers added human and mouse sperm to small mazes designed to mimic the female reproductive tract. In both cases, fewer sperm successfully navigated through the maze in microgravity compared with sperm that moved in Earth’s gravity.

“Many of the proteins found on sperm act as mechanosensors, tiny molecular devices that detect physical forces,” McPherson said. “Remove the force of gravity and it stands to reason that these sensors would be thrown off, disrupting the sperm’s ability to orient and navigate.”

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

Researchers found that the navigational abilities of sperm are negatively impacted by a lack of gravity. (Image credit: Sperm and Embryo Biology Laboratory, Adelaide University)

Under normal conditions with Earth’s gravitational pull, the female reproductive tract releases the hormone progesterone after ovulation as a chemical signal to help sperm navigate toward the egg, McPherson said. To try to boost the odds that human sperm would reach the egg in microgravity, the researchers added this hormone to the system.

“It did help to some degree, but the concentrations needed to produce an effect were much higher than what would naturally occur in the female reproductive tract,” McPherson said.

In theory, high doses of progesterone could be administered, but McPherson cautioned that more research into safety and efficacy is needed before this hormone could be prescribed as a fertility enhancer for space travelers.


What to read next

Reduced fertilization and developmental delays

Next, the researchers looked at fertilization and embryo development for mouse and pig eggs. Successful fertilization was 30% lower for mouse eggs and around 15% lower for pig eggs in simulated microgravity, compared with in Earth’s gravity.

Six days after insemination, pig embryos showed signs of developmental delays. “After fertilisation, the embryo still needs to implant into the uterine wall,” a process that uses gravitational cues to work, McPherson said. “Then the embryo’s cells must organise themselves correctly to eventually form every organ in the body, sustained by a placenta that must function properly for the full duration of pregnancy. Microgravity has the potential to disrupt any or all of these stages.”

While these results pose significant challenges for the future of space colonization, they also give scientists better insight into how gravity affects the development of life here on Earth.

“From the moment a sperm begins its journey to the moment an embryo starts to develop, gravity appears to play a role we are only starting to uncover,” McPherson said. “Gravity is not just a backdrop to life, it is deeply embedded in the biological processes that create it.”

Lyons, H. E., Nikitaras, V., Arman, B. M., McIlfatrick, S. M., Nottle, M. B., Gonzalez, M. B., & McPherson, N. O. (2026). Simulated microgravity alters sperm navigation, fertilization and embryo development in mammals. Communications Biology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-026-09734-4


Human spaceflight quiz: How well do you know our journey into space?

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

18 million-year-old fossils of ape found in Africa, but in an unexpected place

18 million-year-old fossils of ape found in Africa, but in an unexpected place

Brain aging results from a loss of control over how genes are regulated, mouse study suggests

Brain aging results from a loss of control over how genes are regulated, mouse study suggests

Roman mosaic shows topless woman battling leopard in arena, study finds

Roman mosaic shows topless woman battling leopard in arena, study finds

Live Science Today: Meta and Google fined for causing social media addiction and how dogs were our friends for millennia

Live Science Today: Meta and Google fined for causing social media addiction and how dogs were our friends for millennia

1,000-year-old altar and human sacrifices from Toltec Empire discovered in Mexico

1,000-year-old altar and human sacrifices from Toltec Empire discovered in Mexico

Grab a free  Amazon Gift Card, and up to 77% off NordVPN — enjoy all your favorite natural history documentaries

Grab a free $50 Amazon Gift Card, and up to 77% off NordVPN — enjoy all your favorite natural history documentaries

NASA announces ‘near‑impossible’ space plans, including B moon base and humanity’s first nuclear-powered interplanetary spacecraft

NASA announces ‘near‑impossible’ space plans, including $20B moon base and humanity’s first nuclear-powered interplanetary spacecraft

Chinese lander reveals giant ‘cavity’ of radiation between Earth and the moon — and it could change how lunar exploration is done

Chinese lander reveals giant ‘cavity’ of radiation between Earth and the moon — and it could change how lunar exploration is done

Is the metaverse finally dead and buried? What’s really going on with the embattled idea of living in virtual worlds.

Is the metaverse finally dead and buried? What’s really going on with the embattled idea of living in virtual worlds.

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Meta, Google face ‘Big Tobacco’-like reckoning after landmark verdicts on social media addiction

Meta, Google face ‘Big Tobacco’-like reckoning after landmark verdicts on social media addiction

March 26, 2026
OpenAI shelves erotic chatbot ‘adult mode’ indefinitely after uproar over user safety: report

OpenAI shelves erotic chatbot ‘adult mode’ indefinitely after uproar over user safety: report

March 26, 2026
Exclusive | DOJ launches investigation of trans prisoners raping women in California, Maine

Exclusive | DOJ launches investigation of trans prisoners raping women in California, Maine

March 26, 2026
Stefanik presses Michigan president on Chinese student spy security audit

Stefanik presses Michigan president on Chinese student spy security audit

March 26, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
‘Office air’ could be making you ugly, experts warn — as ragged workers sound off after viral TikTok post

‘Office air’ could be making you ugly, experts warn — as ragged workers sound off after viral TikTok post

March 26, 2026
Dolores Catania Was a ‘Mama Bear’ to ‘RHORI’ Cast, Says They Gave ‘100 Percent’ to Show (Exclusive)

Dolores Catania Was a ‘Mama Bear’ to ‘RHORI’ Cast, Says They Gave ‘100 Percent’ to Show (Exclusive)

March 26, 2026
‘Quad God’ Ilia Malinin rebounds from Olympics disaster at figure skating world championships

‘Quad God’ Ilia Malinin rebounds from Olympics disaster at figure skating world championships

March 26, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2026 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.