Science | Fukushima Daiichi Fukushima Fallout: Scads of Mutant Butterflies Radiation link clear, scientists say, and it's only the beginning By Kevin Spak Posted Aug 14, 2012 7:24 AM CDT Copied Smoke rises from the badly damaged Unit 3 reactor, left, next to the Unit 4 reactor covered by an outer wall at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex in Okuma, northeastern Japan, March 15, 2011. (AP Photo/Tokyo Electric Power Co., File) The radiation that poured out of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear reactor last year looks like it's doing a number on Japan's animal populations, researchers warn, after discovering rampant mutations among butterflies. Scientists collected 144 adult pale grass blue butterflies—which would have been overwintering as larvae during the disaster—from around Japan, and found that those from the most irradiated regions had stunted wings and irregularly developed eyes, according to a new study spotted by the BBC. "It has been believed that insects are very resistant to radiation," the lead researcher says. "In that sense our results were unexpected." And the effects are still being felt. Researchers found that breeding those butterflies resulted in all new mutations, and a second set of Fukushima-area butterflies, collected six months later, showed twice the mutation rate of their predecessors. "This study is important and overwhelming in its implications," one biologist says. These mutations "can only be explained as having resulted from exposure to radioactive contaminants." Read These Next Venezuela responds to the US seizure of an oil tanker. Democratic leaders sit out bid to impeach Trump. Judge says ICE has to release Kilmar Abrego Garcia immediately. Audi Crooks of Iowa State may do what no college player has ever done. Report an error