During the Nuclear Winter, the cockroaches might not be alone

Siffy

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Original Article
http://environment.newscientist.com/article/dn13668-nuked-coral-reef-bounces-back.html

Nuked coral reef bounces back

* 18:30 14 April 2008
* NewScientist.com news service
* Catherine Brahic

What does a coral reef look like 50 years after being nuked? Not so bad, it seems. Coconuts growing on Bikini Atoll haven't fared so well, however.

Three islands of Bikini Atoll were vapourised by the Bravo hydrogen bomb in 1954, which shook islands 200 kilometres away. Instead of finding a bare underwater moonscape, ecologists who have dived it have given the 2-kilometre-wide crater a clean bill of health.

"It was fascinating â€"œ I’ve never seen corals growing like trees outside of the Marshall Islands," says Zoe Richards of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies in Australia.

Richards and colleagues report a thriving ecosystem of 183 species of coral, some of which were 8 metres high. They estimate that the diversity of species represents about 65% of what was present before the atomic tests.

The ecologists think the nearby Rongelap Atoll is seeding the Bikini Atoll, and the lack of human disturbance is helping its recovery. Although the ambient radiation is low, people have remained at bay.
Atomic idyll

"Apart from occasional forays of illegal shark, tuna and Napoleon Wrasse fishing, the reef is almost completely undisturbed to this day," says Maria Beger of the University of Queensland in Australia. "There are very few local inhabitants and the divers who visit dive on shipwrecks, like the USS Saratoga, and not on the reef."

Beger took a Geiger counter with her on dives and says that the background levels were similar to that at any Australian city. The same could not be said of coconuts growing on the islands.

"When I put the Geiger counter near a coconut, which accumulates radioactive material from the soil, it went berserk," says Beger.

Journal reference: Marine Pollution Bulletin (DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2007.11.018)
 
I'd love to dive it. I've seen it on a couple of programs. The only thing I don't like is most of the ships are pretty deep, 120 ft or so. My dream dive is actually Truk lagoon:)
The saddest thing about Bikini Atol is the people it displaced. Natives had lived there forever and we just said you have to leave were blowing the place up and you can never come back:(
Chris
 
Anyone else see the Mythbusters the other night where they tested the cockroaches vs. radiation myth? Very interesting, very fitting...
 
"You put the lime in the coconut..."

I actually thought this was going to be about Mythbusters from the title. Very interesting though about the reef. Really makes you think how much of a direct effect human behavior (divers, fishers, etc.) has on the reefs (this is of course aside from the whole global warming thing). Why is it that everything we touch breaks?
 
8 meters hi woww thats like 25-30 feet tall
thats a tree
Sadly if we had a nuclear winter not having sunlight for 15 months would make some pretty nice base rock
 
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