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Radioactive impact of Chernobyl still affecting Europe

24 Years After Chernobyl, Radioactive Boars Still Roam Germany |  Discover Magazine, 21 Aug 2010, A quarter-century after the catastrophe, Chernobyl can’t stay out of the news.When fires broke out in Russia this month, people worried that the flames would spread to areas still affected by the radiation, with unknown consequences. And this week, we learned that Chernobyl-related radiation is actually on the rise somewhere else: in German boars.
Yes, that’s right, boars.

Boars are among the species most susceptible to long-term consequences of the nuclear catastrophe 24 years ago. Unlike other wild game, boars often feed on mushrooms and truffles which tend to store radioactivity and they plow through the contaminated soil with their snouts, experts say [AP].

The radioactive cesium-137 has a half-life of 30 years, and it has worked its way down into the soils of southern Germany to the depth at which it’s drawn into truffles.

Overall, the German government says, the radiation impact in that country from the 1986 Chernobyl disaster is actually on the downslope. But it so happens that the boar population is exploding, and so is the number of boars that hunters bring in with radiation counts too high for human consumption. Says Torsten Reinwald of the German Hunting Federation:

24 Years After Chernobyl, Radioactive Boars Still Roam Germany | 80beats | Discover Magazine

August 21, 2010 - Posted by | general | , , , , , ,

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