The dead do not rot in Chernobyl
Like a landscape of the undead, the woods outside
Chernobyl are having trouble decomposing. The catastrophic meltdown and
ensuing radiation blast of April 1986 has had long-term effects on the
very soil and ground cover of the forested region, essentially leaving
the dead trees and leaf litter unable to decompose. The result is a
forest full of “petrified-looking pine trees” that no longer seem
capable of rotting.
Indeed, Smithsonian reports,
“decomposers — organisms such as microbes, fungi and some types of
insects that drive the process of decay — have also suffered from the
contamination. These creatures are responsible for an essential
component of any ecosystem: recycling organic matter back into the
soil.”
All of that now has been slowed way down, as explored in a new study
led by University of South Carolina biologist Timothy Mousseau, just
published in Oecologica.
No comments:
Post a Comment