China Daily (Hong Kong)

Fukushima caused ‘mutant butterflie­s’

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last year, six months after the disaster. Abnormalit­ies were recorded in 52 percent of their offspring, which was “a dominantly high ratio”, Otaki said.

Otaki said the high ratio could result from both external and internal exposure to radiation from the atmosphere and in contaminat­ed foodstuffs.

The results of the study were published in Scientific Reports, an online research journal from the publishers of Nature.

Otaki later carried out a comparison test in Okinawa exposing unaffected butterflie­s to low levels of radiation, with the results showing similar rates of abnormalit­y, he said.

“We have reached the firm conclusion that radiation released from the Fukushima Daiichi plant damaged the genes of the butterflie­s,” Otaki said.

The quake-sparked tsunami of March 2011 knocked out cooling systems at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, causing three reactors to go into meltdown in the world’s worst atomic disaster for 25 years.

The findings will raise fears over the long-term effects of the leaks on people who were exposed in the days and weeks after the accident, as radiation spread over a large area and forced thousands to evacuate.

There are claims that the effects of nuclear exposure have been observed on successive generation­s of descendant­s of people living in Hiroshima and Nagasaki when the US dropped atomic bombs in the final days of World War II.

But Otaki warned it was too soon to jump to conclusion­s, saying his team’s results on the Fukushima butterflie­s could not be directly applied to other species, including humans.

He added he and his colleagues would conduct followup studies including similar tests on other animals.

Kunikazu Noguchi, associate professor in radiologic­al protection at Nihon University School of Dentistry, also said more data was needed to determine the impact of the Fukushima accident on animals in general.

“This is just one study,” Noguchi said. “We need more studies to verify the entire picture of the impact on animals.”

Researcher­s and medical doctors have so far denied that the accident at Fukushima would cause an elevated incidence of cancer or leukemia, diseases that are often associated with radiation exposure.

But they also noted that long-term medical examinatio­n is needed especially due to concerns over thyroid cancer among young people — a particular problem for people following the Chernobyl catastroph­e.

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 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Comparison between a mutant butterfly (below) and a normal one.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Comparison between a mutant butterfly (below) and a normal one.

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