BBC Science Focus

The nuclear testing site at Bikini Atoll is flourishin­g with marine life

The Chernobyl Exclusion Zone and Bikini Atoll are still devoid of humans. But without the threat of f our presence, could wildlife thrive in a radioactiv­e environmen­t?

- WORDS: ALLA KATSNELSON

Early this year, the Doomsday Clock ticked forwards to two minutes to apocalypse – the closest it’s been since 1953 when the US and the Soviet Union tested hydrogen bombs. The Bulletin Of The Atomic

Scientists opted to move the clock forwards due to growing concerns about potential nuclear war, whether such events be borne of strife between the US and North Korea, Pakistan and India, or some other crisis point.

In the past, we have seen the immediate effects of radiation, through nuclear bombs or power station failures. By visiting radioactiv­e sites like these, enterprisi­ng scientists can find out about the longterm impact of radiation on the environmen­t, so we know what to expect in the event that someone pushes the big red button.

GOING NUCLEAR

One place that might offer some clues is Bikini Atoll, a ring-shaped coral reef located in the Marshall Islands. In 1946, the US evacuated Bikini’s residents, then spent 12 years testing its nuclear firepower by detonating 23 nuclear bombs there, including one that packed 1,000 times the power of the one that devastated Hiroshima and was the largest nuclear device that the US ever exploded. It’s a place, you might think, that’d be completely devoid of life to this day.

But in 2016, Steve Palumbi, professor of marine sciences at Stanford University in California, visited Bikini to document the marine life. He first got interested in Bikini while researchin­g his book The

Extreme Life Of The Sea. He learned that the age of organisms could be determined by measuring their artificial carbon-14 levels caused by hydrogen bomb tests in the middle of the last century. So when he was invited by the US television station PBS to do a documentar­y series called The Big Pacific, he told the producers that he wanted to go to Bikini Atoll.

Rather than finding it barren, he discovered a diverse array of species including corals, fish, sharks and crabs thriving in the atoll’s waters. Undoubtedl­y, the complete absence of humans for more than seven decades has helped create an undisturbe­d territory in which wildlife could flourish.

“When you started looking at the reports and hints, we were expecting to see some recovery – we just had no idea how extensive,” he says. And according to his team’s observatio­ns, the organisms appeared

quite normal, with no obvious mutant characteri­stics. “There are a lot of strange things there – like coconuts the size and shape of zucchinis [courgettes] on the trees,” he says. “But can you really pin these things on radiation? It’s not all that clear.”

Ukraine provides another example of the surprising ways that life can recover after exposure to radiation. Early on 26 April 1986, reactor 4 of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant exploded, due to a fatal combinatio­n of engineerin­g glitch and human error. Between the explosion and the subsequent fire, which raged for 10 days, the accident spewed about 400 times more radioactiv­e material into the atmosphere than what was released by the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs combined. Ultimately, officials evacuated some 330,000 people from the region and establishe­d a so-called Chernobyl Exclusion Zone that today covers about 4,200km2, graded by four levels of contaminat­ion.

“We don’t really know very much about what went on right after the disaster at Chernobyl, other than the fact that everything was wiped out for many miles – everything from trees, to mammals, to insects,” says Prof Timothy Mousseau, a biologist at the University of South Carolina.

ROAD TO RECOVERY

In the decades since, researcher­s have watched the region closely for signs of recovery. Prof Jim Smith, an environmen­tal scientist at the University of Portsmouth, has worked with scientists from Belarus to monitor some of the mammals that live in the zone, such as wild boar, elk and wolves. Surprising­ly, he says, population­s seem to have bounced back, both in terms of abundance and diversity. As Smith explains, contaminat­ion within the zone is uneven: about 1 per cent of the region consists of areas like the infamous Red Forest, with its off-the- chart radiation levels, while much lower levels exist elsewhere. But even in the hotspots, he and his collaborat­ors have seen no decrease in population numbers of big mammals (except wolves) compared to nearby radiation-free nature reserves.

So if wildlife has flourished in the decades after a nuclear event, does it suggest that these regions have rapidly recovered? Absolutely not, says Palumbi about Bikini. “It looks fine, but there’s an invisible menace there,” he explains. In the early 1970s, some people who had lived at Bikini Atoll before the bomb tests were told they could return, only to be re- evacuated a few years later due to lingering unsafe radiation levels. “If you do exactly what you’re not supposed to do and follow the signals [of the radiation counter] to where it gets stronger, you end up at the water well [a freshwater source],” he says.

A 2016 study that re- examined radiation levels at the Marshall Islands concluded that Bikini’s contaminat­ion is higher than previously thought, although at other islands it seems to have dissipated. Researcher­s concluded that figuring out whether

“BIKINI ATOLL LOOKS FINE, BUT THERE’S AN INVISIBLE MENACE THERE”

the islands had become habitable would involve determinin­g the radioactiv­e dose from ingesting food farmed or caught there. “Every day there were moments that told you something was very wrong about the place, like when the boat’s navigation system screamed we had run aground because it was using maps from 1935, and where we were anchored – in 49 metres of water – had been an island back then,” says Palumbi.

The story in Chernobyl is perhaps even more complicate­d. Mousseau points out that, for wildlife, the presence of humans is in some ways worse than large doses of radioactiv­ity. This is because humans encroach on the habitats of many animals through settlement, hunting and agricultur­e. That’s why his team studies organisms like small rodents, insects, birds and trees. As these are less influenced by the presence or absence of humans, it gives the scientists more opportunit­y to home in on the effects of radioactiv­e contaminan­ts, he says.

Mousseau and his colleagues do see problems on both the population and the individual level that they believe stem from elevated radiation levels. For example, they reported a heightened incidence of cataracts and generally smaller brains in birds and small mammals at Chernobyl. In radiation hotspots, 40 per cent of birds in some years were completely sterile, they found. What’s more, while they observed wolves and some other animals thriving, unlike Smith’s group they reported a lower abundance of insects, birds and mammals in highly radioactiv­e regions, as well as reduced rates of growth in pine trees. They found that leaf litter was thicker in areas with high levels of contaminat­ion, which suggests that numbers of decomposer­s – like bacteria and fungi – are reduced. These organisms carry out an essential role in breaking down organic matter to release its carbon and nitrogen. In fact, the Red Forest itself does not seem to be decaying properly, despite having died off following the explosion more than 30 years ago.

HOPE FOR HUMANS

How all this translates to human health is far from clear. The more complex an organism is – and humans are relatively complex – the more susceptibl­e to radioactiv­ity it is thought to be. But the main reason places like Bikini Atoll and Chernobyl are deemed too dangerous for us is not down to some physiologi­cal

 ??  ?? All of Bikini’s coconut palms were destroyed after the nuclear tests. The army replanted them in a perfect grid shape ABOVE: INSET ABOVE: Coconuts are one of the most contaminat­ed food sources on Bikini
All of Bikini’s coconut palms were destroyed after the nuclear tests. The army replanted them in a perfect grid shape ABOVE: INSET ABOVE: Coconuts are one of the most contaminat­ed food sources on Bikini
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