Deformed Vegetables, Fruit Reportedly Pop Up Around Japan Nuclear Plant
You
might not want to eat your vegetables for an entirely new reason after
seeing some strange fruit and veggies that reportedly have turned up in
villages surrounding Japan’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power
plant. Images of the bizarrely deformed flora – which range from
tomatoes...
Deformed Vegetables, Fruit Reportedly Pop Up Around Japan Nuclear Plant
Deformed Fruit
Images of the bizarrely deformed flora - which range from tomatoes with tumor-like growths to monstrous cabbage and conjoined peaches - turned up on the website Imgur this week, with the title, "Effects from the Fukushima radiation disaster?"
ABC News examined the inner workings of Japan's Fukushima Daiichi plant. Find out more here.
It was unclear exactly where the images came from, but the title of the image set suggested that the deformed fruits and veggies were a result of the March 2011 Fukushima nuclear power plant meltdown.
Deformed Fruit
The fruit and vegetable images began to tear across the Web after they were posted as a slideshow and trending topic by MSN.com on Tuesday.
Timothy Mousseau, a biology professor at the University of South Carolina who is currently studying fauna in Fukushima, told ABCNews.com that there is some evidence for increased mutations in the area, but that the images that have emerged online would need follow-up studies to be confirmed as legitimate.
"We have seen some evidence of increased mutation rates in plants and barn swallows in Fukushima, but we have not had the funding to do the sort if rigorous science that is necessary to examine such questions in a convincing manner," he said. "The vegetable photos are suggestive but, at present, are only anecdotal. Follow-up studies need to be conducted by qualified researchers to verify the validity of these observations."
Deformed Fruit
Five months after the disaster, cesium 137 and 134 were detected in more than a dozen bluefin tuna caught near San Diego. The levels were 10 times higher than tuna found in previous years.
Deformed Fruit
ABC News' Akiko Fujita contributed to this report.
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