Mutant flowers at Fukashima

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OVERKILL

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http://www.weather.com/science/nature/news/mutant-flowers-japan-fukushima-famous?_escaped_fragment_

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Four years after the disaster at Japan's Fukushima nuclear power plant, strange things still are happening to the plants and animals living there.

Recent years have brought reports of deformed fruit and mutant butterflies, but the latest is a remarkable photo of deformed daisies posted on Twitter by @san_kaido, who took the photo below in Nasushiobara City, which lies about 70 miles from Fukushima.

Translated from Japanese, @san_kaiod's tweet describes how the daisies growing there have apparently been impacted by exposure to radiation since the March 2011 incident, which resulted in the meltdown of three of Fukushima's six reactors following a devastating tsunami:

"The right one grew up, split into 2 stems to have 2 flowers connected each other, having 4 stems of flower tied beltlike," according to Fukushima Diary. "The left one has 4 stems grew up to be tied to each other and it had the ring-shaped flower. The atmospheric dose is 0.5 μSv/h at 1m above the ground."

The last sentence from the tweet -- about the radiation dose now being "0.5 μSv/h at 1m above the ground" -- describes the radiation dose per hour that's now present at the site where the photo above was taken. It's classified as safe for "medium to long term habitation" according to this explanation of radiation levels.

That no doubt played a part in the Japanese government's recent decision to allow more than 7,000 residents of a town near the Fukushima plant to return home, four years after being evacuated. As the London Telegraph learned, however, it's unclear how many residents actually will go back to live there permanently.

"There are no shops. There are no doctors. I don't know what to do," one former resident told local Japanese media.


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Originally Posted By: Shannow
Not sure that you can blame the reactor...

https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=760570


Youre not THAT far from Japan. Does the current carry water from up there down your way?

I do wonder how many mutations we see day to day and if this is one of them. I know Ive seen some oddities before, so is the co-location to the plant related or not?

I wonder if there is a way to tell via DNA analysis of these versus a "pristine" plant.
 
Originally Posted By: Mr Nice
What about the turtles ?


Let's not forget the spiders. If I went over there, I'd be trying like heck to get bit by a Fukushima spider.
 
Originally Posted By: Ethan1
Originally Posted By: Mr Nice
What about the turtles ?


Let's not forget the spiders. If I went over there, I'd be trying like heck to get bit by a Fukushima spider.


08-spider-man-2002.jpg
 
I am sure there are some odd living things near Chernobyl.

The reactor mess in Japan will be a disaster for many many years to come. There is still ground water leaking into the reactor and then into the ocean. They have spent several billion dollars on cleanup and no real solution is in sight. Many (most) of the skilled workers have had their dose of radiation and cannot work there for years if ever.
 
The Japanese have done a most remarkable of "controlling" this disaster. Not sure anyone including the U.S. could have done better. I worked my whole life in nuclear power.

I don't have a comprehensive in depth knowledge of the total picture. But I do know that the fear of radiation increases much beyond Japan is irrational.

The fear of radiation doses and contamination in Say Hawaii and the West Coast is laughable.
 
Originally Posted By: OVERKILL
I don't know what to do," one former resident told local Japanese media


Ebay Florist?
 
I believe the ocean current run from Japan northeast to Alaska then down the west coast of the US. I may be incorrect but I'm fairly confident this is the case.
 
I am sure there are some odd living things near Chernobyl.

The reactor mess in Japan will be a disaster for many many years to come. There is still ground water leaking into the reactor and then into the ocean. They have spent several billion dollars on cleanup and no real solution is in sight. Many (most) of the skilled workers have had their dose of radiation and cannot work there for years if ever.
 
Originally Posted By: Donald
I am sure there are some odd living things near Chernobyl.

The reactor mess in Japan will be a disaster for many many years to come. There is still ground water leaking into the reactor and then into the ocean. They have spent several billion dollars on cleanup and no real solution is in sight. Many (most) of the skilled workers have had their dose of radiation and cannot work there for years if ever.


That's a new (word for word) perspective.
 
Originally Posted By: Donald
I am sure there are some odd living things near Chernobyl.


You can google this really quick and get articles on it. At first glance the most surprising thing is it's more like a "refuge"; since it's basically the lack of human interactions that has had the most effect, and the animals look normal

But on closer look, the animals are sick or have tumors, but are not "weird".

Because there isn't really drastically new to the environment to adapt too, they were already ideal the way they were. For the most part the "mutations" just result in death; rather then a new beneficial feature that will help that animal survive better like in Xmen or water world or something.

The only mutation that may be helpful would be one that relates to being more resistant to damage from the radiation.
 
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Originally Posted By: JHZR2
Originally Posted By: Shannow
Not sure that you can blame the reactor...

https://bobistheoilguy.com/forums/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=760570


Youre not THAT far from Japan. Does the current carry water from up there down your way?

I do wonder how many mutations we see day to day and if this is one of them. I know Ive seen some oddities before, so is the co-location to the plant related or not?

I wonder if there is a way to tell via DNA analysis of these versus a "pristine" plant.





4800 miles? That's a fair distance.



They look odd, like something from outer space.


edit: or the creature from John Carpenter's "The Thing"
 
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I wonder what the effects on the population will be in a few years? I'm sure it is not going to be good.
 
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