By Bob Yirka
A team of researchers affiliated with multiple institutions in Japan, and one in Norway has found evidence that suggests domesticated pig genes in pig-boar hybrids living in the Fukushima exclusion zone are diminishing. In their paper published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B, the group describes their genetic study of tissue samples taken from wild boar, pigs and hybrids in the exclusion zone.
Back in 2011, Japan experienced its largest earthquake ever—that quake and the tsunami that followed led to a disaster at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. The release of radiation from the plant forced people that lived and worked in the area to evacuate—officials soon declared the areas around the site an exclusion zone. In the absence of people, wild animals began to move into the area, including wild boars. Prior research has shown that as the wild boars moved in, some of them mated with abandoned domesticated pigs, producing hybrids. In this new effort, the researchers wondered if the addition of domesticated pig genes to the boar gene pool was having an impact on them.
To learn more, the researchers collected genetic material from 243 animals—some from within a 20-kilometer radius of the reactor, and some from within 40 kilometers. The team then conducted a mitochondrial analysis of the samples to identify the genes that each was carrying along maternal lines.
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