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Power EU Science

Scientists Finally Know Why Germany's Wild Boar Are Surprisingly Radioactive (msn.com) 54

An anonymous reader shared this report from the Washington Post: On April 26, 1986, the infamous explosion at a Chernobyl nuclear power plant unleashed large amounts of radiation into the atmosphere, an event that contaminated wildlife across country lines. The radiation levels seen in animals as a result has decreased in recent years — with the exception of one animal: the wild boar. For years, scientists questioned why levels of a radioactive isotope known as cesium-137 have remained surprisingly high in wild boars rooting around Germany and Austria, while decreasing in other deer and roe deer. In a new study released last week, a team of researchers finally solved this "wild boar paradox."

They uncovered that the main radioactive source is not the Chernobyl accident but nuclear weapons testing from the 1960s...

Radioactive cesium results from both nuclear weapons explosion and nuclear energy production. The element comes in different isotopic composition, cesium-135 and cesium-137, depending on the source. By analyzing the ratio of these amounts, the researchers can pinpoint the source of the radiation... In the nearly 50 collected meat samples, the team found 88 percent of the samples were above Germany's regulatory limits for radioactive cesium in food. Calculating the ratio of cesium isotopes in the samples, they found that nuclear weapons testing accounted for 10 to 68 percent of the contamination. Even if the Chernobyl accident had never happened, "some of the wild boars would actually still exceed the regulatory limits for food safety limits only because of the weapons tests today," said Georg Steinhauser, a radiochemist at TU Wien and author of the new study. "I think this is pretty mind-blowing because they were 60 years ago."

Steinhauser said the wild boars probably ingested the cesium from contaminated deer truffle mushrooms, which they dig up and eat during the winter when corn and acorns on the ground are scarce. Cesium seeps through the soil and is absorbed by the mushrooms, as if it were a nutrient. This also explains why observations show radioactivity levels in wild boar are higher in the winter. While cesium from both the nuclear weapons testing and the Chernobyl accident spread through the soil, Steinhauser said, the mushrooms appear to have fully absorbed the source from the nuclear weapons testing so far. Cesium seeps very slowly through the soil, sometimes only one millimeter per year, he said. Deer truffles, located between 20 and 40 centimeters, have already absorbed the "older" cesium from six decades ago. The "younger" cesium from Chernobyl has likely not fully integrated or is just now integrating at the soil depths where the mushrooms are located. But it could be bad news when the cesium from Chernobyl does reach the mushrooms — radioactivity levels could go up higher.

The study's author says his study isn't arguing for or against the use of nuclear energy — but does say that "it has to be done responsibly." He calls the study's results "a cautionary tale that we have to take good care of our environment," said Steinhauser. "Once released, a radioactive substance can never be unreleased again — and nature doesn't forget."
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Scientists Finally Know Why Germany's Wild Boar Are Surprisingly Radioactive

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  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @12:54AM (#63821154)

    There are no Gauls like Asterix and Obelix still around depending on wild boar for their diet.

    • by stooo ( 2202012 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @01:18AM (#63821194) Homepage

      We, French people, still eat Boars.
      But we're incredibly lucky: The contaminated cloud from Chernobyl stopped just over the Rhine river (At least according to the official french narrative)
      It seems that all the particles from atomic weapons testing also stopped at the french border, probably stopped y the customs officers....

    • Many farmers hunt wild boars, primarily because of the damage they cause to plantations, but then also they eat them.

    • Gauls? Wild boars are eaten all over western and central Europe. In fact we're approaching game season now, so wild boar is about to be on many European's plates along with hares, pheasants, and venison.

    • by fazig ( 2909523 )
      Since the very smart ancestor Germans hunted most natural predator into extinction in German forests (currently with the growing population of wolves politicians are discussing to keep their numbers "economically feasible"), in some places there's no shortage of wild boar.
      I hunt them myself in the Black Forest region. Personally I prefer deer, but from first hand experience board is fairly popular in this region as seasonal food.

      And while this region I'm hunting in isn't as affected as Bavaria, we still
  • wild boar paradox

    I'm undecided between Peter Porker (spider-ham, the Spider-verse) and Harry Plopper (spider-pig, The Simpsons).

  • Nice performance for this article to never say Whose nuclear tests contaminated the boars in Germany.

    • Nuclear tests occurred in the Pacific or the Far East of Russia. Both will have contributed to the contamination, but separating out which ones are more responsible is probably impossible.

    • by test321 ( 8891681 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @03:17AM (#63821358)

      The full paper has this sentence: "The global fallout from atmospheric nuclear explosions peaked in 1964, more than 20 years prior to Chornobyl’s fallout. Due to the timespan between both events, the actual 137Cs inventory in greater soil depths differs from that in the top soil across the regions.". That clarifies they mean all the atmospheric tests of the 1960s (US/USSR/France/UK), not one in particular.

  • Do they glow in the dark? It'd be so much easier to hunt them...

  • I'm also at the top of the food chain. Does cesium only affect mushrooms?

  • The article ends with a misleading conclusion from Georg Steinhauser: "Once released, a radioactive substance can never be unreleased again — and nature doesn’t forget.". Cesium-137 has a half-life of about 30 years. This means that if you think that it today is too much cesium-137 from nuclear weapons testings about 60 years ago you should be aware that 60 years ago the amount of cesium-137 was about 4 times as much from those sources. Wait another 60 years and there will only be 1/4 left of c
    • by tragedy ( 27079 )

      Let's not forget though that it decays into radioactive barium, which then decays into stable barium. While not radioactive, that stable barium can still be poisonous.

  • The article didn't mention that you can't eat the mushrooms collected in those forests either.

    • by tragedy ( 27079 )

      By the sound of it, it depends on the depth the fungi grow at. The ones growing underground are experiencing the cesium from open-air nuclear tests. Aside from decaying, that cesium is also sinking into the soil, so it will eventually both get too deep to affect the underground fungi, and break down into barium. The stuff from Chornobyl is mostly above where the fungi grow, but it will, in coming years, sink to the point where it hits a peak in those underground fungi. Then it will sink too far and decay mo

  • that part is more fascinating that mushrooms /radiothropic fungi - can use radioactive material as source of engergy.

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