Research worms 'too old' to go to space station Published duration 4 December 2018

image copyright Reuters image caption The worms will be fired into space on a rocket, before linking up with the International Space Station

Thousands of worms being blasted into space could be "too old" for research when they get to the International Space Station (ISS).

The launch of a SpaceX rocket was delayed after mouldy food was found among another research team's kit.

Teams from Exeter, Nottingham and Lancaster universities are hoping the microscopic worms could lead to new treatments for muscular dystrophy.

The worms were meant to be "just turning into adults" at the launch.

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket was due to launch from the NASA Kennedy Space Centre in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Tuesday evening, but has now been rescheduled for 18:16 GMT on Wednesday.

The 24-hour delay means that the worms will be a day older than planned when they reach the ISS, and the research teams may have to rely on "back-up colonies" that will need to be prepared for their unexpected trip.

media caption Worm muscles to help astronauts in space

Libby Jackson, from the UK Space Agency, said: "The timing will be quite critical to the worm research, they were ready to go into the capsule and it had been timed that they were just turning into adults at the time of launch.

"That's now all gone out of the window because everything has shifted by a day.

"This is what happens in space flight, we've always got to be prepared."

The Molecular Muscle Experiment aims to "understand the causes of neuromuscular decline in space", she added.

image copyright Alexander Gerst image caption The crew that will conduct experiments on the worms arrived at the ISS on Monday

A Russian Soyuz crew ship launched from Kazakhstan on Monday with two new astronauts - Anne McClain, an American who studied at Bath and Bristol universities, and Canadian David Saint-Jacques, who studied at Cambridge University.

They were joined by veteran cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko.

The worms share many biological characteristics with humans, according to Exeter University, including "alterations to muscle and the ability to use energy".

Dr Timothy Etheridge said space flight represented "an accelerated model of the human ageing condition".

"Hopefully by understanding molecular causes and counter measures against that, space flight may provide an opportunity to understand human ageing on earth," he added.

The worms

image copyright Getty Images image caption The nematode worm species, Caenorhabditis elegans, is about 1mm in length