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切尔诺贝利和福岛地区动物的遗传学与生态学研究。

Genetic and ecological studies of animals in Chernobyl and Fukushima.

作者信息

Mousseau Timothy A, Møller Anders P

机构信息

From the Department of Biological Sciences and the Environment and Sustainability Program, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208 (Mousseau); and the Laboratoire d'Ecologie, Systématique et Evolution, CNRS UMR 8079, Université Paris-Sud, Bâtiment, Orsay Cedex, France (Møller).

出版信息

J Hered. 2014 Sep-Oct;105(5):704-9. doi: 10.1093/jhered/esu040.

Abstract

Recent advances in genetic and ecological studies of wild animal populations in Chernobyl and Fukushima have demonstrated significant genetic, physiological, developmental, and fitness effects stemming from exposure to radioactive contaminants. The few genetic studies that have been conducted in Chernobyl generally show elevated rates of genetic damage and mutation rates. All major taxonomic groups investigated (i.e., birds, bees, butterflies, grasshoppers, dragonflies, spiders, mammals) displayed reduced population sizes in highly radioactive parts of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. In Fukushima, population censuses of birds, butterflies, and cicadas suggested that abundances were negatively impacted by exposure to radioactive contaminants, while other groups (e.g., dragonflies, grasshoppers, bees, spiders) showed no significant declines, at least during the first summer following the disaster. Insufficient information exists for groups other than insects and birds to assess effects on life history at this time. The differences observed between Fukushima and Chernobyl may reflect the different times of exposure and the significance of multigenerational mutation accumulation in Chernobyl compared to Fukushima. There was considerable variation among taxa in their apparent sensitivity to radiation and this reflects in part life history, physiology, behavior, and evolutionary history. Interestingly, for birds, population declines in Chernobyl can be predicted by historical mitochondrial DNA base-pair substitution rates that may reflect intrinsic DNA repair ability.

摘要

切尔诺贝利和福岛野生动物种群的遗传学和生态学研究的最新进展表明,接触放射性污染物会对基因、生理、发育和适应性产生重大影响。在切尔诺贝利进行的少数遗传学研究普遍显示,遗传损伤率和突变率有所升高。在切尔诺贝利禁区的高放射性区域,所有被调查的主要分类群(即鸟类、蜜蜂、蝴蝶、蚱蜢、蜻蜓、蜘蛛、哺乳动物)的种群数量都有所减少。在福岛,对鸟类、蝴蝶和蝉的种群普查表明,接触放射性污染物对其数量产生了负面影响,而其他类群(如蜻蜓、蚱蜢、蜜蜂、蜘蛛)至少在灾难后的第一个夏天没有出现显著下降。目前除昆虫和鸟类外,其他类群的信息不足,无法评估对其生活史的影响。福岛和切尔诺贝利之间观察到的差异可能反映了接触时间的不同,以及与福岛相比,切尔诺贝利多代突变积累的重要性。不同分类群对辐射的明显敏感性存在相当大的差异,这在一定程度上反映了生活史、生理学、行为和进化史。有趣的是,对于鸟类来说,切尔诺贝利的种群数量下降可以通过历史线粒体DNA碱基对替换率来预测,这可能反映了内在的DNA修复能力。

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