The Cool Down on MSN
Mutant 'super pigs' are breeding fast in Fukushima's abandoned nuclear zone
The key appears to be maternal inheritance.
A Fukushima mutant pig study shows how escaped domestic pigs rapidly bred with wild boar after the 2011 nuclear disaster.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Rapidly reproducing mutant 'super pigs' found in Fukushima nuclear disaster zone
A fast-growing population of hybrid or mutant pigs is spreading through abandoned areas near ...
A mutant super pig population has spiraled out of control — thanks to their inherited, rapid reproductive cycles — in the ghost towns of a nuclear fallout zone in Japan, according to reports and ...
Around 12.1 trillion yen ($82 billion) has already been spent to deal with the 2011 disaster at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear ...
March 11 marks the 15th anniversary of the Fukushima nuclear disaster. It also marks the new growth of plant life and, as Muneo Kanno, a rice farmer of Fukushima, told me, “fushicho no gotoku” or ...
Fifteen years ago, Fukushima, Japan, was home to one of the worst nuclear disasters in history. Today, some places in the region look just as they did in the immediate aftermath of that fateful Friday ...
An anti-nuclear protest in Tokyo in April 2012. Japan is likely to begin restarting its shutter atomic plants.Getty Images The World Health Organization’s (WHO) report (PDF) on the estimated health ...
The "super pig" population exploded after domesticated hogs interbred with feral wild boars in areas close to the nuclear fallout zone in northeast Japan ...
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