Animals Rule Chernobyl 30 Years After Nuclear Disaster
Marina Shkvyria watches for animal tracks as she walks toward an abandoned village in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, the area sealed to the public after a nuclear power plant exploded here 30 years ago, on April 26, 1986. Spotting one, she crouches and runs her finger over the toes of a wolf print in the loose sand.
It may seem strange that Chernobyl, an area known for the deadliest
nuclear accident in history, could become a refuge for all kinds of
animals—from moose, deer, beaver, and owls to more exotic species like
brown bear, lynx, and wolves—but that is exactly what Shkvyria and some
other scientists think has happened. Without people hunting them or
ruining their habitat, the thinking goes, wildlife is thriving despite
high radiation levels.
Shkvyria is a wolf expert at the Ukraine’s National Academy of
Sciences, and one of a handful of scientists following the fate of
Chernobyl’s wildlife. She discovered the wolf pack near the village
using unorthodox, but cheap, methods. “We came down here late last
spring and howled, and the young wolf pups howled back from the top of
that hill,” she says with a mischievous smile.
In a new study released Monday,
Beasley says that the population of large mammals on the Belarus side
has increased since the disaster. He was shocked by the number of
animals he saw there in a five-week survey. Camera traps captured images
of a bison, 21 boars, nine badgers, 26 gray wolves, 60 raccoon dogs (an
Asian species also called a tanuki), and 10 red foxes. “It’s just incredible. You can’t go anywhere without seeing wolves,” he says.
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Data: 18.04.2016In a new study released Monday, Beasley says that the population of large mammals on the Belarus side has increased since the disaster. He was shocked by the number of animals he saw there in a five-week survey. Camera traps captured images of a bison, 21 boars, nine badgers, 26 gray wolves, 60 raccoon dogs (an Asian species also called a tanuki), and 10 red foxes. “It’s just incredible. You can’t go anywhere without seeing wolves,” he says.
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Fonte: www.nationalgeographic.com
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