‘Radioactive hybrid’ pigs taken over Fukushima’s exclusion zone

Scientists have uncovered a new threat to humanity emerging in the area surrounding the former Fukushima nuclear power plant: indestructible radioactive hybrid terror pigs.

The details emerged from studies of how radiation from the partial nuclear meltdown at the plant in 2011 had affected local wildlife, which has in many cases “rewilded” urban areas vacated years ago by populations forced to move out by the threat of radiation following the disaster.

This is a familiar process following large-scale human evacuations and similar rewilding situations occurred in the area surrounding the site of the Chernobyl incident in 1986, despite the efforts of the Soviet authorities to control the animal population.

The NBC-suited boffins working on the project were expecting to find wild boar in the affected zone since they have been reported in former urban areas for some years, having come down from the surrounding mountains to reclaim the towns and cities of the area as their own realm almost as soon as the humans vacated them.

However, the scientists were not prepared for the true prospect that awaited them, as related in a report in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B journal.

The local wild boar – a subspecies endemic to the region known as the Japanese Boar (aka Sus scrofa leucomystax or the White-Moustached Pig) – having created a fiefdom covering all of the locale vacated by over 160,000 displaced humans, became cocky and aggressive, and also lost their natural wariness.

The marauding boar also began interbreeding with escaped domestic pigs that had made good with their trotters from local farms after their human keepers had been forced to flee. The pigs, for their part, were ill-suited to life in the wild in a radioactive, post-apocalyptic hellscape and presumably threw in their lot with the tough, wily boar as their best chance of survival.

The result was a new kind of boar-pig hybrid that originated in the initial exclusion zone within 20km of the site of the nuclear plant, where radiation levels were presumably highest. The study found that the hybrids did not display any signs of mutation, despite the doses of radiation they were subjected to. Indeed, surveys of the local boar population found they are contaminated by up to 300 times the safe human dosage of the lethal isotope caesium-137 [PDF].

In other words, they are highly radioactive and seemingly virtually indestructible.

These hybrids now comprise up to 10 per cent of the local population, evidently combining the wild-smarts of their boar ancestors with an enjoyment of the finer things which human civilisation can bring, inherited from their domesticated forebears.

This is presumably why humans attempting to reclaim their former settlements in the area around the Fukushima plant for eventual reopening have found it difficult to dislodge the porcine interlopers from their recently taken strongholds. The Fukushima exclusion zones have been gradually lifted in stages since the incident to allow former residents to return.

In some cases the aggressive porkers have refused to give ground and have attacked returning humans, meaning human authorities have been forced to deploy armed assassination teams of hunters to flush them out.

The future of the Fukushima terror pigs is hard to predict. If they had the intelligence to team up and combine into one unstoppable force, an indestructible boar army of that nature would surely be able to overrun the rest of the Japanese archipelago and, The Reg fears, possibly the whole world.

Unfortunately for the boar, although they naturally live in matriarchal groups called sounders, their natural aggression and territorial nature mean that it would be very much out of character for the Fukushima boar to combine into one huge, terrifying unit, whether for the purposes of destroying human civilisation or any other reason.

The ecology boffins who studied them suggest that while the hybridisation of the two species appears to have had no ill effects on the resulting animals, the pig genes in their make-up will eventually spread and dilute as the hybrid animals move further from their ground-zero birthplace, until eventually “the introgressed genes will eventually disappear in this area.

The superior firepower and coordination of their human usurpers mean the boar will hopefully be forced back into the mountains, where their desire for the trappings of human culture will gradually dissipate and the memory of their time as unquestioned warlord rulers of the region will slowly fade.

Generations of boar to come will look down on human settlements from their mountain redoubts and feel a pang of regret and recognition for their missed opportunity to conquer the world.

The boar war has been avoided, but at what cost to the boar?

See more here: theregister.com

Header image: BBC

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Comments (5)

  • Avatar

    Mark tapley

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    Hogs are not aggressive unless cornered (usually by dogs). The only problem with them generally is that they root up the ground all the time. This causes millions in agricultural damage and is a big problem in all types of land where hogs have come through and torn up the ground Large hogs can leave an area so that it looks like a bunch of bomb craters. When soil has been rooted up along with the grass it is difficult to dress up. One sow can produce 15 offspring multiple times per year. They are mostly nocturnal and hunting them is time consuming and inefficient. I like to sleep at night rather than hunt pigs. The best way to gt them under control is to take 4X8 cattle panels and some angle iron and weld up some pig traps with 3 slanted flop down doors on one end. Scatter some grain around and inside and they will root themselves right on in. I was dispatching them with my 30-06 but since the advent of the fake virus have not been able to buy ammo. High cal. cartridges if available have also gone way up in price. No way I’m going to pay sixty dollars for 20 rounds. The .22 has to do the job. Still a shot between the eyes or through the heart will do. Drag them out for the buzzards and coyotes to eat, then just use the ATV to drag the trap to another location. No hog, no problem.

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  • Avatar

    Saighdear

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    … and any reference to “animals with 2 heads” or whatever other mutations? … As with Chernobyl, it seems that the Wildlife, at least, can live Life as normal. So are Humans so much more susceptible?

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Superluminal

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    That aughta be some tasty sausage.

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  • Avatar

    tom0mason

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    Another fear-porn report from the BBC pretending to be scientific.
    Words and phrases like “boar to combine into one huge, terrifying unit…” ,”deploy armed assassination teams”, “terror pigs ” “the lethal isotope”, etc., are all designed to illicit emotional responses from the reader, and provide little in the way of truly informing the reader. Also they mix events in Japan with the Chernobyl as if they are equivalent which is all very Greenpeace!

    The “300 times the safe human dosage of the lethal isotope caesium-137 [PDF].” links to an EPA document that is riddled with assumptions — e.g. “Cesium-137 is significant because of its prevalence, relatively long half life (30 years), and its potential effects on human health.”
    Yes it has “potential effects on human”, I wonder what the actual effects are?

    EPA, has established a Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) of 4 millirem per year for beta particle and photon radioactivity from man-made radionuclides in drinking water. Cesium-137 would be covered under this MCL.
    The average concentration of cesium-137 which is assumed to yield 4 millirem per year is 200 picocuries per liter (pCi/l). If other radionuclides which emit beta particles and photon radioactivity are present in addition to cesuim-137, the sum of the annual dose from all the radionuclides shall not exceed 4 millirem/year.

    This document does NOT show how lethal Cesium-137 actually is. I do not disagree that Cesium-137 has such a potential but this BBC’s quoted document does NOT say much about actual ‘lethal dose’, the EPA document estimate is from computer model .

    Also I understand that fit well fed humans are more robust than is generally acknowledged (most estimates are modeled outcomes for a population, and popular media reports like to use the worse case scenarios) when it comes to exposure to radiation. It often comes as a shock to much of the public when real facts and figures of how few people actually got sick from quite high radiation exposure and doses — e.g. people still live in and around the Chernobyl site (mostly older people) and they are mostly STILL fit and healthy with no apparent signs of radiation sickness or increases in cancer rates (https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-04-26/30-years-after-chernobyl-these-ukrainian-babushkas-are-still-living-their-toxic).

    I also note the allusion that wild boar and domesticated pig hybrids appear to be something unusual. Where as I know that many of the fancy butchers and eateries in the UK offer such meat (often classed as wild boar) at a premium to customers. Hybrids such as these are NOT that unusual in the UK (see https://www.wildmeat.co.uk/collections/wild-boar ) and during the the periods when sows are pregnant or are protective of their piglets they will be very aggressive but so too are some domestic pigs breeds.

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    A Reasonable Man

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    Nothing at all unusual about the hog behavior and breeding observed there. Oh I lived in Japan in the 60s. You could visit Hiroshima and Nagasaki and observe a bustling city no different from places there were not nuked, except a few preserved ‘memorial’ structures Good evening, thanks John O

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