frogs – Techdirt (original) (raw)
Black Frogs Rising: How Nature Is Dealing With Chernobyl’s Radioactivity
from the nature-is-healing dept
The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine is the largest in Europe, and one of the ten largest in the world. It’s of particular concern at the moment because it sits close to the front line between the Ukrainian and Russian armies, and has been subject to bombardment and loss of backup power. The fear is that damage arising from battles around it could result in the release of radioactive material, or even lead to a more serious accident.
The present fears about Zaporizhzhia have rather obscured the fact that in the north of Ukraine lies Chernobyl, the site of the world’s worst nuclear disaster in 1986. With the Chernobyl New Safe Confinement that was put in place in 2016, the situation there seems to be stable, although the Russian invasion of Ukraine means the nuclear power plant is still potentially at risk. Surrounding the Chernobyl plant is an officially designated Exclusion Zone covering around 2,600 square kilometers (about 1,000 square miles). The Wikipedia entry explains:
Today, the Exclusion Zone is one of the most radioactively contaminated areas in the world and draws significant scientific interest for the high levels of radiation exposure in the environment, as well as increasing interest from tourists. The zone has become a thriving sanctuary with natural flora and fauna with some of the highest biodiversity and thickest forests in all of Ukraine. This is due to the lack of human activity in the Exclusion Zone and despite the radiation.
In effect, the Exclusion Zone has become a massive scientific experiment regarding the effects of radiation on living things. These can take unexpected forms, as a recent open access article in Evolutionary Applications reveals. The authors of the paper have written a shorter, more approachable post about their work for the Phys.org site. It explains that in 2016 they noticed Eastern tree frogs that were close to the Chernobyl reactor had an unusual black tint to their skin: normally, they have a bright green color. Investigating tree frogs inside and outside the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, they found:
Chernobyl tree frogs have a much darker coloration than frogs captured in control areas outside the zone. As we found out in 2016, some are pitch-black. This coloration is not related to the levels of radiation that frogs experience today and that we can measure in all individuals. The dark coloration is typical of frogs from within or near the most contaminated areas at the time of the accident.
The authors explain:
Melanin is responsible for the dark color of many organisms. What is less known is that this class of pigments can also reduce the negative effects of ultraviolet radiation. And its protective role can extend to ionizing radiation too, as it has been shown with fungi. Melanin absorbs and dissipates part of the radiation energy. In addition, it can scavenge and neutralize ionized molecules inside the cell, such as reactive oxygen species. These actions make it less likely that individuals exposed to radiation will go on to suffer cell damage and increase their survival chances.
In the years since the Chernobyl accident, there have been ten generations of frogs, and the scientists suggest that natural selection in the area explains why dark frogs are now the dominant type for the species, replacing the previous green-skinned variety.
The Chernobyl disaster remains a frightening reminder of how nuclear technology can malfunction catastrophically as the result of human errors. The black frogs study shows that even in these extreme circumstances it is possible to glean interesting scientific information from the abnormal environment that has been created there. Let’s hope that the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant does not become another such opportunity for science.
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Filed Under: chernobyl, frogs, genetics, natural selection, nuclear energy, radiation, russia, science, tree frogs, Zaporizhzhia
DailyDirt: Bringing Back The Undead
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
Nature has a few examples of animals coming back to life after appearing to be dead — and not just pretending to be dead, but actually surviving a state of very low metabolism. There are even a few bizarre news reports about people coming back to life. (Ahem, and we’re not referring to a certain someone who is well-known for Easter.) Here are just a few examples of seemingly-extreme resuscitation.
- North American wood frogs can freeze solid and appear dead, until they thaw in the spring and get down to business. The trick is to thaw in the right way. If a frog’s brain thawed before its heart did, the frog would have some problems. [url]
- Hibernating black bears stay dormant for 5-7 months without eating, drinking or doing much of anything. However, a hibernating bear’s body temperature doesn’t drop much — about 10 °F — even though the bear’s metabolism is at about 25% of its normal rate. [url]
- There are a few companies working on cryonics — freezing people who believe they can be revived when medical technology is much more advanced. Maybe these people are hoping to meet Erin Gray someday…. [url]
If you’d like to read more awesome and interesting stuff, check out this unrelated (but not entirely random!) Techdirt post via StumbleUpon.
Filed Under: bears, cryonics, death, erin gray, frogs, hibernation, reanimation, resuscitation
DailyDirt: Real Zombies…
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
Since it’s Halloween, there are probably a lot of folks dressed up like zombies. But as we’ve mentioned before, Mother Nature has created a few of her own actual zombies. Here are just a few more examples.
- Did you know that the government sprays a baculovirus into the forest that can cause gypsy moth caterpillars to act reckless and even suicidal? The virus infects the caterpillars, takes over their molting genes, and re-programs the zombie caterpillars to liquify and rain contagious bodily fluids down upon other gypsy moth larvae. [url]
- North American wood frogs can survive being partially frozen (up to 70 percent of their internal water turned to ice) and twitch back to life. The frogs can stay in suspended animation for about 4 weeks, and it takes them about a day to thaw out and return to the living world. [url]
- Ants in Borneo have been found with a curious ability to explode and spew a sticky yellow glue over their enemies. The lethal sticky substance can take out other insect invaders and protect an ant colony from attack. [url]
- European paper wasps, infected by parasites, are turned into zombies that leave their hive to gather with other zombie wasps — so that the parasites can mate. Wasps with female parasites become crazy queen wasps that fly off to infect more wasps. [url]
- To discover more interesting biological curiosities, check out what’s currently floating around the StumbleUpon universe. [url]
By the way, StumbleUpon can recommend some good Techdirt articles, too.
Filed Under: ants, caterpillar, frogs, halloween, insects, parasites, virus, wasps, zombies