If those trusses were built by a truss manufacturer, so that the metal tie plates at the center of the lower chords are well pressed into the wood, I think you can put a moderate load on the bottom chord if you install a king post on each truss (verticle 2x4 from the center of the bottom chord to the peak). The trusses appear to span about 20' and to be less than 2' on center. If you don't have snow, and the roof is not very heavy, I would guess you can safely put 5#/sf more load if you distribute it fairly evenly over the lower chords. The local design standards here in south Georgia call for (I think 1' of snow) and ceiling weight of 10#/sf, which allows for ceiling tiles, light fixtures, etc.
If it were me I would add a king post to a couple of adjacent trusses, put a 1/4" plywood or 1/2" particle board floor across them around the center, and store about 100# on it and measure the sag of the center of the lower chord. I bet it doesn't drop 1/4".
Course, I won't be standing under it when you try.