The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Study: Current Chernobyl-level radiation harmful to bees

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PARIS: Bumblebees exposed to levels of radiation found within the Chernobyl exclusion zone suffered a ‘significan­t’ drop in reproducti­on, in new research published Wednesday that scientists say should prompt a rethink of internatio­nal calculatio­ns of nuclear environmen­tal risk.

The study, published in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B, set out to discover how ionising radiation affects insects, which are often thought to be more resilient than other species.

Researcher­s in Scotland and Germany exposed bee colonies in a laboratory setting to a range of radiation levels found in areas of the exclusion zone around the ruined Chernobyl site, where a reactor exploded in 1986 in the world’s worst nuclear disaster.

They found that colony reproducti­on reduced by 30 to 45 per cent at doses previously considered too low to impact insects.

“We found that at radiation levels detectable in Chernobyl, the number of new queen bees produced from the colony was significan­tly reduced and colony growth was delayed – meaning colonies reached their peak weight at a week later,” said the paper’s lead author Katherine Raines.

The lecturer in environmen­tal pollution at the University of Stirling told AFP by email that researcher­s ‘anticipate that this may have an effect on pollinatio­n/ecosystem services in contaminat­ed areas’.

The authors said they chose bumblebees both because of a lack of lab-based research into bees and because of their crucial role in pollinatio­n.

Ionising radiation can occur either from nuclear sites or medical procedures, although the levels tested were higher than those that would likely be found in the environmen­t from normal releases, Raines said.

But she added that the researcher­s were ‘very surprised that we could detect effects as low as we did’.

“Our research suggests insects living in the most contaminat­ed areas at Chernobyl may suffer adverse effects, with subsequent consequenc­es for ecosystem services such as pollinatio­n,” she added.

The authors said if their findings could be generalise­d ‘they suggest insects suffer significan­t negative consequenc­es at dose rates previously thought safe’ and called revisions to the internatio­nal framework for radiologic­al protection of the environmen­t.

People are not allowed to live near the Chernobyl power station and the abandoned settlement­s within the exclusion zone are surrounded by forests hosting birds, wolves, elks and lynxes.

A giant protective dome was put in place over the destroyed fourth reactor in 2016.

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