25/05/16

WHAT CHERNOBYL'S WILDLIFE CAN TEACH HUMANS


 


The 1,000-square mile exclusion zone surrounding the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant has remained virtually free from human intrusion for the last 30 years—ever since the landscape was blanketed in lethal levels of radiation following a catastrophic meltdown. The years since have seen a gradual rewilding of the area, with nature reclaiming the ghost town surrounding the defunct plant, and animals large and small moving into the surrounding forests. Headlines trumpet that the wildlife is “thriving,” “flourishing,” and ruling the landscape.

The real story is vastly more complicated. Animals are present, but they haven’t escaped the effects of radiation, according to the results of 15 years’ worth of studies conducted by Timothy Mousseau, a professor of biology at the University of South Carolina, Columbia, and his colleagues. Theirs is one of the only research groups gathering on-the-ground data to better understand the Chernobyl disaster’s effects on the plants, animals and microbes living there. In 2011, they also branched out to Fukushima, repeating some of their Ukraine studies in the Japanese disaster zone, for comparison.

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Data: 23.05.2016
Fonte: www.good.is

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