Melanin-Rich Fungi: Potential Radiation Shields for Space Habitats

November 29, 2025
Melanin-Rich Fungi: Potential Radiation Shields for Space Habitats
  • Ekaterina Dadachova and colleagues reported that melanised fungi may grow faster in the presence of radiation and potentially convert radiation into usable energy, though the mechanism remains under investigation.

  • Historical context recalls the 1986 Chernobyl disaster and the 30 km exclusion zone, framing longstanding questions about radiation’s impact on life and ecological adaptation.

  • Nelli Zhdanova, a Ukrainian scientist, first documented the fungus in May 1997, identifying Cladosporium sphaerospermum as the species involved.

  • Biochemical mechanisms for using radiation as energy are not fully proven, and some growth under radiation may reflect nutrient-stress responses rather than direct energy harvesting.

  • The same fungal strain traveled to the ISS in December 2018, where it grew about 1.21 times faster over 26 days than Earth controls, suggesting potential radiation-related growth advantages in microgravity.

  • A broader implication is the potential use of myco-architecture—fungus-based walls and materials—as lightweight, self-regenerating radiation shields for Moon or Mars bases, which could reduce launch costs compared with traditional materials.

  • Researchers are investigating whether this fungus could shield astronauts from cosmic rays or serve as a radiation-observing organism, while noting that further evidence from space experiments is needed.

  • Space-based experiments on melanin-rich fungi suggest they can absorb and attenuate radiation, pointing to possible protective layers for future space habitats, though results may be influenced by microgravity and require more context.

  • Potential applications include radiation shielding and bioremediation using radiation-tolerant fungi, with the possibility of protecting astronauts during space exploration.

  • Studies show radiotropism is not universal among fungi from Chernobyl; space-based experiments with Cladosporium sphaerospermum have yielded mixed results, including increased growth under galactic cosmic radiation.

  • Melanin-rich fungi were found growing inside Chernobyl’s reactor, with hyphae seemingly growing toward ionizing radiation rather than solely tolerating it.

  • Some researchers caution that observed growth boosts on the ISS could be influenced by zero gravity, not radiation alone, underscoring uncertainty about radiosynthesis as the mechanism.

  • The discovery challenges assumptions about the limits of life, suggesting extremophiles may be more resilient and carrying implications for astrobiology and life in harsh extraterrestrial environments.

  • Overall, melanin-rich fungi survive and may thrive in one of Earth’s most radioactive environments, prompting further study of their biology and possible applications.

Summary based on 3 sources


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