Invasive species from Fukushima tsunami washing up on U.S. shores
by J.D. Heyes
Natural News
June 23, 2012
(NaturalNews) Japan’s tsunami-caused nuclear disaster at the Fukushima energy complex in March 2011, in which three atomic reactors were heavily damaged, continues to wreak havoc on ecosystems – in the U.S.
The latest danger emanating from the Fukushima complex to hit our shores came not in the form of irradiated tuna, but in the form of a boxcar-sized piece of floating dock which washed ashore along a sandy Oregon beach earlier this month. The find initially excited some beachcombers, reports said, but scientists quickly began to worry that such debris was quickly becoming a whole new way to transport invasive species – crabs, seaweed and other marine organisms – to U.S. waters, further harming West Coast marine environments, The Associated Press reported.
Worse, scientists and marine biologists suspect more species could be hitching a ride to our shores as more tsunami debris arrives in the coming months.
“We know extinctions occur with invasions,” John Chapman, assistant professor of fisheries and invasive species at Oregon State University’s Hatfield Marine Science Center, told AP. “This is like arrows shot into the dark. Some of them could hit a mark.”
Mitten crabs, spartina, shellfish all cause problems here – though they came from far away
Indeed. While international trade has meant that marine invasion to the West Coast has been occurring since the late 1860s, the global economy has greatly accelerated the process. So much so that now, there are areas like San Francisco Bay which amount to a “global zoo” of invasive species, where as many as 500 plants and animals from waters afar have established in U.S. waters.
The species can attach themselves to the hulls of cargo ships and the water some vessels take on as ballast, but have also come from home aquariums that have been emptied into bays.
Not only have the species upset marine ecosystems, but there are staggering costs associated with the phenomenon as well, in tens of billions of dollars.
“Mitten crabs from China eat baby Dungeness crabs that are one of the region’s top commercial fisheries. Spartina, a ropey seaweed from Europe, chokes commercial oyster beds. Shellfish plug the cooling water intakes of power plants. Kelps and tiny shrimp-like creatures change the food web that fish, marine mammals and even humans depend on,” the AP reported.
If anything, the Fukushima disaster will only make matters worse, since the problem has been growing for years. A 2004 study published by the scientific journal Ecological Economic, for example, estimated then that some 400 threatened and endangered species in the U.S. were facing wipe-out due to invasive species.
That said, scientists admit it’s too early to tell how badly Japan’s tsunami debris will worsen the situation already here in the U.S.
“It may only introduce one thing,” Andrew Cohen, director of the Center for Research on Aquatic Bioinvasions in Richmond, Calif., said. “But if that thing turns out to be a big problem, we would rather it not happen. There could be an economic impact, an ecological impact, or even a human health impact.”
Johnny Clamseed
Reports said the dock that washed ashore in Oregon came from a fishing port located on Japan’s northern tip. It was strewn with a ton-and-a-half of mussels, seaweed, barnacles and starfish. AP reported that volunteers scraped it clean then buried it above the high water line and sterilized the rest with torches.
Some experts said, however, that despite the cleaning, there was no way to tell yet whether the scrap had released spores, larvae or anything else that could spawn and grow somewhere along the coast.
“That’s the ‘Johnny Clamseed’ approach,” James Carlton, professor of marine sciences at Williams College, said, a reference to John Chapman, better known as Johnny Appleseed, who introduced apple trees to parts of Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois and Indiana in the 19th century. “While that is theoretical, we don’t actually know if that kind of thing happens.”
Yet, scientists say they do know that the bigger the debris, the more likely it is bringing something along for the ride.
More debris continues to wash ashore along U.S. beaches – so much so that state officials are beginning to make appeals to Washington for help. This week, Washington state Gov. Chris Gregoire announced plans for her state to begin clean-up efforts but said federal help would be needed.
“We don’t have the resources at the state level to do what we’re going to have to do here,” she said.
Sources:
Kyodo: No. 4 Spent Fuel Pool’s Cooling System Stopped After Alarm Sounds
By ENENews
June 30, 2012
The cooling system for a spent fuel pool at the crippled Fukushima Daiichi power plant’s No. 4 reactor automatically suspended operation Saturday morning after an alarm issued a warning at around 6:25 a.m., Tokyo Electric Power Co. said.
The water temperature of the pool was 31 C at the time of the suspension, and leakage of water with radioactive materials has not been confirmed, TEPCO said, adding it is unlikely the temperature will rise rapidly.
[hat tip: The Intel Hub]
Vote to keeping nuclear power sparks protest in Japan [video]
Press TV
June 29, 2012
Thousands of people demonstrated outside Prime Minister Yohihiko Noda’s official residence. The protest, which is almost uncommon in Japan, was organized through the Internet. It came two days after the shareholders of Japan’s private electricity utilities voted to continue with the operation of nuclear power stations.
End the Lie Radio with Madison Ruppert – Episode 20 [video]
End the Lie Radio with Madison Ruppert
June 16, 2012
Episode 20
End the Lie Radio with Madison Ruppert and guest, Christina Consolo aka RadChick discussing her trip to South Bend, Indiana after the radiation spike of 6/7/12 and her subsequent investigation into what she’s discovered, including actual video and photos provided by Christina for this must listen episode. End the Lie Radio is live from 11:00 PM – 1:00 AM EST/8:00 PM – 10:00 PM PST every Sunday evening on OrionTalkRadio.com.
Christina Consolo is a former clinical researcher supervisor with NIH credentialing, a former Member-at-Large for the Board of Directors of the Ophthalmic Photographers’ Society, a peer reviewer for the Journal of Ophthalmic Photography. She has written, published, and contributed to numerous scientific research in retinal imaging and ophthalmology for the past 24 years. She is also an award-winning biomedical photographer and maintains several websites to teach people about radiation, mitigation, and other nuclear issues. She is also the host of Nuked Radio Tuesdays & Thursdays from 12:00 -1:00 PM EST on the OrionTalkRadio.com.
Christina’s articles on EndtheLie.com – http://endthelie.com/?x=0&y=0&s=christina+consolo#axzz1xnIKLh7Z
For more Fukushima information, visit http://FukushimaFacts.com
Please help Christina purchase a spectrometer in order to get the most accurate radiation readings and thus get you the most precise information possible by shopping through her Amazon link or donate directly via PayPal to fukushimafacts@gmail.com. Keep in mind, this is expensive equipment and it is the only way that specific isotope readings can be obtained from food items.
http://EndtheLie.com
Support us! http://EndtheLie.com/store
http://OrionTalkRadio.com
Show page: http://bit.ly/etlradio
All material(s) used in this video that are not original or are under copyright are used under Fair Use under the Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. § 107.
Chris Busby: the Forsmark nuclear waste Repository plan [video]
YouTube — drdwoland
June 12, 2012
The future of nuclear energy depends on the industry finding somewhere to put the high level waste. This is radioactive for millions of years and must be isolated from the environment. The hitherto intractable problem was apparently solved by the Swedish nuclear industry who proposed a plan to encapsulate it in copper canisters and bury it in tunnels 500m underneath the Baltic sea at Forsmark. The full environmental impact report was released last year; the government requirements are that the company SKB show that the waste will not emerge from the canisters between 100,000 years and 1 million years. After studying the report in detail it became clear that the design was flawed because it did not include consideration of the Helium gas produced from the alpha emitters. The volume of gas in each canister would cause it to explode long before 100,000 years resulting in the contamination of the Baltic Sea by the equivalent of 2000 Chernobyl accidents. Back to the drawing Board guys!
Paper is at
http://www.bsrrw.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/forsmark_ecrr_busby20120531.pdf
[hat tip: GlobalResearchTV]
Fallout Guide for Canada…week of June 25, 2012 [video]
Rad Chick
June 23, 2012
RadChick & Jules will be on vacation this week…the fallout guides for Canada, the US & Europe will run in place of the regularly scheduled fallout forecast on the Orion Talk Radio Network.
Canadian radar: http://www.weatheroffice.gc.ca/radar/index_e.html
Jet stream forecasts & archive: http://virga.sfsu.edu/crws/jetstream.html
FALLOUT FORECAST & ALERT FOR UK 6.22.2012 [video]
Rad Chick
June 22, 2012
I need a vacation, everything is starting to look like weather maps…lol
Alert from MET: http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/
Be back in a week…stay safe 🙂
