Animals abound at Chernobyl 30 years after nuclear disaster
Nearly 30 years after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine, elk, deer, boar and wolves abound in the exclusion zone deserted by humans, researchers say in an international study.
The study, published on Monday in the Current Biology journal, shows that there at least as many of these mammals inside the 4 200km2 perimeter around the nuclear plant that exploded in April 1986 than in uncontaminated nature reserves.
Researchers counted the animals by aerial observations of the large zone devastated by a fire and an explosion of one of the plant's nuclear reactors. They found that there are seven times more wolves in the exclusion zone than in nearby parks. This doesn't mean radiation is good for wildlife, just that the effects of human habitation, including hunting, farming and forestry, are a lot worse.
Early studies after the nuclear disaster revealed major radiation effects on the exclusion zone, including a sharp decrease in the animal population.
The latest observations show nature's resilience and could provide insight on the long-term impact of the more recent 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan.
The helicopter survey data found growing abundance of elk, roe deer and wild boar from 1 to 10 years after the accident. A short-term reduction in the wild boar population was linked to a disease outbreak not related to radiation exposure. These increases coincided with a drop in elk and wild boar populations in other parts of the former Soviet Union.
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